Similar words: exaggerate, exasperate, dagger, stagger, obliterated, staggered, staggering, exasperation. Meaning: [-tɪd] adj. 1. represented as greater than is true or reasonable 2. enlarged to an abnormal degree 3. enlarged beyond truth or reasonableness.
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121. Maybe I had exaggerated things and Gilly wasn't such a bad old stick after all.
122. The front wings were less exaggerated, the rear overhang shorter and the tail a little taller.
123. She had not yet learned how greatly Brian exaggerated his financial problems in order to keep her in line.
124. They need not be exaggerated by anyone who, for whatever reasons, is offended by it.
125. Yet many historians would argue that these claims were fraudulent, or at least greatly exaggerated.
126. Media coverage continued to suggest that the dangers of dioxin had all been exaggerated by emotional environmentalists.
127. Thus I was only too aware that the realities of psychic phenomena were somewhat exaggerated by these treatments.
128. Philippa's fear was exaggerated, as if a bridge had started to collapse under her.
129. Drugs, hormones, food, distension, and emotional stress elicit exaggerated motor responses.
130. The fact is that both the benefits of affirmative action and the white-male fears of reverse discrimination have been exaggerated.
131. The minute we step off the plane, we see Mami has not exaggerated.
131. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
132. They grumble about the Ossis' exaggerated expectations and leisurely working habits.
133. There were exaggerated expectations for one thing, a more or less inevitable consequence of those golden years.
134. She had been a scamp in those days, he said, sighing with exaggerated wistfulness.
135. Hence also the exaggerated tribalism, the bullheaded racism of an Alf Garnett, the dogged male chauvinism of an Andy Capp.
136. Their untrained but nervous eyes, and rumour, vastly exaggerated both the ferocity and size of the advancing army.
137. Perhaps it is because of a hearty dislike of chauvinism and exaggerated nationalism that I have not become an intense patriot.
138. No one was killed or even harmed, except for the emotional trauma caused by the exaggerated reports of peril.
139. Some wildly exaggerated claims have been made about this so-called "wonder-drug".
140. He gave an exaggerated stretch, displaying the powerful biceps and the soft inside skin of his arms.
141. Yet even Peter's ascendancy over the nobility must not be exaggerated.
142. Their personalities are easily exaggerated, their foibles ripe for caricature or psychotherapy.
143. But his physique was not impressive, and I fear he must have exaggerated.
144. Let's also agree that my observations are exaggerated by 15 percentage points.
145. Like other bystanders, they felt the fuss over color was exaggerated, particularly since they had seen it happen before.
146. Kenneth Haley, an economist for Chevron, supported lifting the embargo on principle but said both sides have exaggerated the impact.
147. The extent to which educational skills are needed in broadcasting can none the less be exaggerated.
148. In the past, anthropologists have made the most exaggerated claims concerning the supposed typicality of their observations.
149. Machismo is an exaggerated cult of virility which expresses itself in male assertions of superiority over females, and competition between men.
150. A certain mental and physical deterioration of course occurs with age, but its speed and effects are popularly exaggerated.
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