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exaggerate
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin exaggerātus, perfect passive participle of exaggerō (“to heap up, increase, enlarge, magnify, amplify, exaggerate”) (see -ate (verb-forming suffix) and -ate (adjective-forming suffix)), from ex- (“out, up”) + aggerō, aggerāre (“to heap up”), from agger (“a pile, heap, mound, dike, mole, pier, etc.”), from aggerō, aggerere (“to bear, carry to (some place), bring together”), from ad- (“to, toward”) + gerō (“to carry”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɛɡˈzæd͡ʒ.ə.ɹeɪt/, /ɛk(s)ˈzæ(ɡ)d͡ʒɜː(ɹ).ɹeɪt/, /ɪɡˈzæd͡ʒ.ə.ɹeɪt/
Audio (California): (file)
- Hyphenation: ex‧ag‧ger‧ate
Verb
exaggerate (third-person singular simple present exaggerates, present participle exaggerating, simple past and past participle exaggerated)
- To overstate, to describe more than the fact.
- Synonyms: big up, overexaggerate, overstate, hyperbolize, stretch, overcharge
- Antonyms: belittle, downplay, understate, trivialize
- I've told you a billion times not to exaggerate!
- He said he’d slept with hundreds of girls, but I know he’s exaggerating. The real number is about ten.
- 2023 April 5, Mark Hay, “Does Testosterone Affect Your Politics?”, in VICE:
- These testosterone thumpers have repackaged and exaggerated the study, with a credulity born of zealotry, into articles with shitposty titles like “Trust The Science: Study Links Left-Wing Politics to Lower Testosterone,” casting it as hard proof of their hormonal theories of healthy politics.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
to overstate, to describe more than is fact
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Adjective
exaggerate (comparative more exaggerate, superlative most exaggerate)
- Exaggerative; overblown.
- 1901, Valentin Matcas, The Human Addictions:
- And in general, if it is a natural feeling, let it be, but at normal, living levels, not too exaggerate.
- 2005, Daniel Marin, Megator, page 4:
- Water was invading, like some loving arms, some protecting wings, but its love and care were too exaggerate, they were deadly.
- 2012, Joy Damousi, Mariano Ben Plotkin, Psychoanalysis and Politics, page 202:
- You will leave [the camp] and when confronted to the smallest inconvenience you will have again these reactions that, for me, are very exaggerate.
- 2012, Yair Goldreich, The Climate of Israel: Observation, Research and Application, page 132:
- From this comparison, it seems that the data in Table 7.7 are reasonable, while Ashbel's values are exaggerate.
Further reading
- “exaggerate”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “exaggerate”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
- “exaggerate”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
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Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [ɛk.saɡ.ɡɛˈraː.tɛ]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [eɡ.zad.d͡ʒeˈraː.te]
Verb
exaggerāte
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