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unexaggerated

/ig-zaj-uh-rey-tid/US // ɪgˈzædʒ əˌreɪ tɪd //UK // (ɪɡˈzædʒəˌreɪtɪd) //

不言而喻,不夸张,不夸张的,毫不夸张

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : unduly or unrealistically magnified: to have an exaggerated opinion of oneself.
    • : abnormally increased or enlarged.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as inliteral
Antonyms

Examples

  • We think our actions have an exaggerated influence on other people.

  • Continue hopping from one leg to the other like the exaggerated movement of a speed skater.

  • For those who suffer from anxiety, the visual bias to attend to threat is exaggerated.

  • It seems that rumors of Facebook Instant Articles’ death have been greatly exaggerated.

  • Britain’s first female prime minister, who died in 2013, is portrayed as clashing with Olivia Colman’s Elizabeth to an extent that some say is exaggerated.

  • Reports of the “end of men,”turns out, have been greatly exaggerated.

  • Inevitably, some of this may have been exaggerated in social media.

  • The threat of this virus to the general public may have been exaggerated.

  • His many publications and his emails to me are long-winded, occasionally exaggerated, and sometimes hard to follow.

  • One volunteer gave an exaggerated eye roll when I asked about it.

  • We dismounted, and speedily found that MacRae hadn't exaggerated the evil qualities of that descent.

  • What a spectral and exaggerated shape all things take in her scared and over-excited gaze!

  • He spoke with an animation and earnestness that gave an exaggerated importance to every syllable he uttered.

  • It not only brought about the instant beginnings of the siege, but its proportions were grossly exaggerated in the public eye.

  • The news of Bruce's success, no doubt exaggerated and distorted, produced a great sensation in the northern parts of Scotland.