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hyperactive

/hahy-per-ak-tiv/US // ˌhaɪ pərˈæk tɪv //UK // (ˌhaɪpərˈæktɪv) //

多动症,多动症患者,多多益善,多动

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : unusually or abnormally active: a company's hyperactive growth; the child's hyperactive imagination.
    • : displaying exaggerated physical activity sometimes associated with neurologic or psychologic causes.
    • : hyperkinetic.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • All but 1966 were hyperactive seasons based on NOAA definition.

  • The pass of innovation in the local search space seems way more hyperactive than anywhere else at this point in time.

  • He pressed Zuckerberg repeatedly with yes or no questions on his handling of a proposal to reduce the spread of content by hyperactive users on the far ends of the political spectrum.

  • The drug is relatively inexpensive and directly tamps down neutrophil activation, which may in turn reduce the formation of the hyperactive neutrophil traps in the vessels.

  • Following an all too predictable cycle of the hyperactive 21st century, focus on the explosion was ephemeral.

  • Now, a new therapy might have these women filling up the same prescriptions as their hyperactive grandchildren.

  • She suggested he was hyperactive and that he cannot sit still in class.

  • He did get his 15 minutes, however, which is a long time in the non-stop, hyperactive world of 4chan.

  • Ritalin drives dopamine up in hyperactive children, and their activity decreases.

  • We must stimulate the apathetic and the sluggish; we must moderate the hyperactive; we must correct paresis, tics, etc.

  • In hyperactive children the arms must first be restrained by holding them tight in our hands.