the fact of exceeding something else in amount or degree: His strength is in excess of yours.
the amount or degree by which one thing exceeds another: The bill showed an excess of several hundred dollars over the estimate.
an extreme or excessive amount or degree; superabundance: to have an excess of energy.
a going beyond what is regarded as customary or proper: to talk to excess.
immoderate indulgence; intemperance in eating, drinking, etc.
adjective
more than or above what is necessary, usual, or specified; extra: a charge for excess baggage; excess profits.
verb (used with object)
to dismiss, demote, transfer, or furlough (an employee), especially as part of a mass layoff.
Origin of excess
1350–1400; Middle English (noun and adj.) <Latin excessus departure, digression, equivalent to exced-, variant stem of excēdere to exceed + -tus suffix of v. action
Shake off any excess flour and gently place in the heated oil.
Make Carla Hall’s Crispy Shallot Green Bean Casserole|Carla Hall|December 27, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The Senate Intelligence Committee report says they secured a contract with the CIA in 2006 valued “in excess of $180 million.”
The Luxury Homes That Torture and Your Tax Dollars Built|Michael Daly|December 12, 2014|DAILY BEAST
By the way, killjoys, American charitable giving goes up by 42 percent during this season of crass materialistic greed and excess.
Keep Christmas Commercialized!|P. J. O’Rourke|December 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
And some specialize in treating women, who have different risk factors for excess drinking.
Elizabeth Peña and the Truth About Alcoholic Women|Gabrielle Glaser|October 24, 2014|DAILY BEAST
“Most women are not drinking to excess because they feel ‘powerful’ in the first place,” she says.
Elizabeth Peña and the Truth About Alcoholic Women|Gabrielle Glaser|October 24, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Great numbers of people are passing to and fro, an excess of the feminine element being generally observable.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 121, November, 1867|Various
If now the excess is on the side of the Franco-Russian alliance, the danger is still the same.
The Kingdom of God is Within You / Christianity and Patriotism / Miscellanies|Lev N. Tolstoy
"I shall have another pipe," he proclaimed, with an agreeable note of excess.
Marriage|H. G. Wells
The sudden transition from sorrow and despair to this excess of joy excited him infinitely.
Stoneheart|Gustave Aimard
The annual excess of deaths over births amounted to about two and one half per cent.
The Journal of Negro History, Volume 7, 1922|Various
British Dictionary definitions for excess
excess
noun (ɪkˈsɛs, ˈɛksɛs)
the state or act of going beyond normal, sufficient, or permitted limits
an immoderate or abnormal amount, number, extent, or degree too much or too manyan excess of tolerance
the amount, number, extent, or degree by which one thing exceeds another
chema quantity of a reagent that is greater than the quantity required to complete a reactionadd an excess of acid
overindulgence or intemperance
insurance, mainlyBritisha specified contribution towards the cost of a claim, stipulated on certain insurance policies as being payable by the policyholder
in excess ofof more than; over
to excessto an inordinate extent; immoderatelyhe drinks to excess
adjective (ˈɛksɛs, ɪkˈsɛs) (usually prenominal)
more than normal, necessary, or permitted; surplusexcess weight
payable as a result of previous underpaymentexcess postage; an excess fare for a railway journey
Word Origin for excess
C14: from Latin excessus, from excēdere to go beyond; see exceed