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Answer for the clue "Hyperbolize ", 10 letters:
exaggerate

Alternative clues for the word exaggerate

Word definitions for exaggerate in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
verb COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADVERB greatly ▪ Consider the death of Amtrak, to paraphrase Mark Twain, to be greatly exaggerated . ▪ Its position is similar to that of Mark Twain: reports of its death would be greatly exaggerated . ▪ All of these pressures ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. To overstate, to describe more than is fact.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1530s, "to pile up, accumulate," from Latin exaggeratus , past participle of exaggerare "heighten, amplify, magnify," literally "to heap, pile, load, fill," from ex- "thoroughly" (see ex- ) + aggerare "heap up, accumulate," figuratively "amplify, magnify," ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
v. to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth; "tended to romanticize and exaggerate this `gracious Old South' imagery" [syn: overstate , overdraw , hyperbolize , hyerbolise , magnify , amplify ] [ant: understate ] do something to an excessive degree; "He overdid ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Exaggerate \Ex*ag"ger*ate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Exaggerated ; p. pr. & vb. n. Exaggerating . ] [L. exaggeratus, p. p. of exaggerare to heap up; ex out + aggerare to heap up, fr. agger heap, aggerere to bring to; ad to + gerere to bear. See Jest . ] To heap ...

Usage examples of exaggerate.

Apart from the requirements of a gradation of ranks, or the consequences of a conquest, the multitude delight to surround their chiefs with privileges--whether it be that their vanity makes them thus to aggrandize one of their own creations, or whether they try to conceal the humiliation of subjection by exaggerating the importance of those who rule them.

There was so much of her, such incredibly long legs, such an extreme flow of line and volume, Beheim became entranced by the exaggerated perspectives available, gazing up at the equatorial swell of her belly toward the flattened mounds of her breasts with their dark oases of areola and turreted nipples, or down from her breasts toward the unruly pubic tuft between her thighs, in all reminding him by its smoothness of the sand sculpture of a sleeping giantess he had seen years before on a beach in Spain.

At all events, there can be no doubt that the Arkite theorists have exaggerated the importance and extent of these views beyond all tolerable bounds, and even to absurdity.

An exaggerated and uncompromising asceticism has won for many Christian saints their honours on earth and their assurance of special privileges in heaven.

I do not, for a moment, want to suggest that there was no truth in his Bhakti, but there was much mixture in it and even what was mental and vital was very much exaggerated.

But the most irritating of girl--men is assuredly the Parisian and the boulevardier, in whom the appearance of intelligence is more marked and who combines in himself all the attractions and all the faults of those charming creatures in an exaggerated degree in virtue of his masculine temperament.

Grosvenor Square, Comte de Cavilon stepped from his closed coach with exaggerated steps and minced to the door.

I glanced at Liza, who pulled a comical face and gave an exaggerated shrug to indicate that she did not know why Chad should be so interested.

She dines with me on Sundays, and if you would care to come to dinner next Sunday you will confess that I have not exaggerated her capacities.

She might be exaggerating to soothe her pride, but Mary did not believe it.

She watched the canopy up the brightness, exaggerating the incoming light until they could see the starlight on the North Waste Land, the great long streaks of coloured sands and outcrop rocks, silvery ghosts, coming closer all the time.

What are the origin and history of the specific thoughts involved in exaggerating a threat?

Bonneval, somewhat exaggerating the danger I had run in trying to raise the veil of the handsome daughter of Scio.

I related the whole affair to the bishop, exaggerating the uproar, making much of the injustice of such proceedings, and railing at a vexatious police daring to molest travellers and to insult the sacred rights of individuals and nations.

I spoke to the masters of all of them, exaggerating considerably the injury that had been done to me.