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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
overboard
adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
washed overboard (=pushed from a boat into the sea by the force of the water)
▪ The young man was washed overboard in the storm.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
fall
▪ And what happened, that a girl should fall overboard?
▪ They are not allowed out of this dark passage, in case they fall overboard.
go
▪ I decided to go overboard with processors and connected three digital multi-effects units and a mono delay.
▪ My problem is, I have a tendency to go overboard with compliments.
▪ They were to stay on the alert for any soldier unlucky enough to go overboard.
▪ Although Levin sometimes goes overboard with jokes, his breezy, slightly irreverent tone is a welcome one.
▪ Then more cans of the gas, so carefully loaded the day before, went overboard.
▪ You are demonstrating to them how to recognize, name and communicate their feelings without going overboard.
▪ Gifford had gone overboard a bit in the blues though ... For some reason this thought made Edwin chuckle to himself.
throw
▪ A Soviet kitchen hand, hit on the head and thrown overboard.
▪ Then we had thrown overboard everything that was biodegradable and kept the rest in a special rubbish barrel.
▪ Jonah volunteers to be thrown overboard as a sacrifice to the deep in order for them to survive.
▪ Traditional values and old-fashioned rules of journalism have been thrown overboard in the competitive race for audiences and commercial success.
▪ This area of business is so important that the nuclear nations should throw overboard all thought of evenhandedness.
▪ The remains of the Con federate machinist who was torn to pieces were shoveled into buckets and thrown overboard.
▪ In Nicodemia people were bundled into barges, taken out to sea and thrown overboard.
▪ The vinyl coating on the flight-deck Hueys was peeled off and thrown overboard.
wash
▪ The tragic yachtsman, a Tynesider in his 40s, was washed overboard as he tried to change a sail.
▪ Some of the food had been washed overboard, and the rest would follow or soon be ruined.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And what happened, that a girl should fall overboard?
▪ But the flare was useless and I tossed it overboard.
▪ I threw the decayed rattan overboard.
▪ One error and he would have been torn loose and hurled overboard to be smothered by the driving spray.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Overboard

Overboard \O"ver*board`\, adv. Over the side of a ship; hence, from on board of a ship, into the water; as, to fall overboard.

To throw overboard, to discard; to abandon, as a dependent or friend.

To go overboard, to go to an extreme; to overdo; as, he went overboard at the buffet and got an upset stomach.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
overboard

"over the side of a ship," Old English ofor bord, from over + bord "side of a ship" (see board (n.2)). Figurative sense of "excessively, beyond one's means" (especially in phrase go overboard) first attested 1931 in Damon Runyon.

Wiktionary
overboard

a. Outside of a boat, in the water adv. Over the edge; especially, off or outside of a boat.

WordNet
overboard
  1. adv. to extremes; "he went overboard to please his in-laws"

  2. from on board a vessel into the water; "they dropped their garbage overboard"

Wikipedia
Overboard (comic strip)

Overboard is Chip Dunham's daily newspaper comic strip about a shipload of incompetent pirates. It debuted in 1990 and is distributed by Universal Press Syndicate.

Overboard derives much of its humor from having its characters anachronistically placed in modern times. For instance, they put quarters in dockside parking meters, order pizza by cellphone, and have a company health insurance plan.

These pirates are much less fearsome than their ruthless predecessors. In the early years of the strip, much of their activity involved standing around on deck drinking coffee and reading the newspaper. Recent strips feature golf, pet care and gardening. In the 1990s, their main enemy was the Green Ship and its rival band of pirates. These days their most feared adversaries seem to be giant rabbits and the Internal Revenue Service.

Competence is also an issue. While the Overboard crew carries cutlasses and makes raids, most often their treasure is stolen by disgruntled shipmates or by more able pirates. The captain has made a horrendous mess of the investments for their pension fund (at one point, he adjusts his failed investment strategy by flushing cash straight down the toilet).

The pirates actively pursue dates with women but instead repulse them with poor hygiene, fleas, disgusting table manners, immaturity, cheapness, and a lack of interest in the arts. The captain impresses women and other outsiders with his incredibly boring personality (in one strip, the captain's psychiatrist dies of boredom during a therapy session). Despite occasional friendships with women, it appears that none of the pirates has ever had an official girlfriend, other than the captain who currently has a mermaid girlfriend.

The main characters are:

  • Captain Henry Crow - the bland skipper of their ship, the "Revenge". Crow seems a little smarter and more sophisticated than the crew, but he is far too decent to be a successful pirate, even if he were otherwise capable. Regularly participates in large battles but, curiously, reacts to duels with cowardice.
  • Charley Duff - along with Crow's other crew members, the diminutive Charley was originally portrayed as lying, lazy, stupid, selfish, and childlike. Yet, like the others, he was the best Crow could do, owing to recruitment woes such as scurvy. In recent years, Charley has been more productive and responsible, perhaps for two reasons. Several years ago, Charley attempted to reform his character so as to win the affection of Marlene. Though he failed in his goal, the changes seem permanent. Also, Charley has become a conscientious pet owner, which has mitigated his selfishness, it seems. Perhaps all this makes it not too surprising that Charley has become an ardent if hapless gardener.
  • Nate - crew member who at first glance looks most like a pirate: hulking, fearsome, with a massive and impenetrable black beard. Despite some rough ways and bad hygiene, Nate is a gentle giant who often acts with honor and respect toward others, especially women and children. Nate and the captain often conspire to keep Charley out of trouble.
  • Louie - Captain Crow's pet dog. He doesn't speak but rather projects thought balloons, in the manner of Snoopy or Garfield. Louie is extremely spoiled, always helping himself to human luxuries such as beds and steaks. He seems to have a better lifestyle than the subordinate pirates and usually gets his way. He is a yellow Labrador Retriever, as mentioned in the strip repeatedly, and many of Louie's behaviours are considered stereotypical of the breed.
  • The Green Pirates - a gang of rival pirates from another ship, they are always around to start a fight or to steal their treasure. While more ruthless than Crow's crew, the Green Pirates have not generally proven to be much smarter or more competent.
  • Cecilia - a female pirate from the Green Ship, she made a covert attempt to seduce Captain Crow and raid his ship. When her cover was blown, she became a regular aboard Crow's ship; he encouraged her visits because he remained in love with her, despite her duplicity. Curiously, Cecilia became friends with Crow and no longer posed any threat, though she never came to love him. This storyline lasted several months and Cecilia stayed in the strip for a long time after her plot was exposed. It seemed that she had become a regular character, but Cecilia silently disappeared from the strip sometime in 2003, though her dog Raymond remains. (During Cecilia's storyline, it was stated that she was captain of the Green Ship, but she was not seen before or after. In the strip for January 3, 2007, Crow states that he and the Green Ship captain became enemies in high school. The Green Ship captain is shown to be a man.)
  • Raymond - another dog. Unlike Louie, Raymond walks on two legs, wears a hat, smokes cigarettes, and talks directly to humans. He can also understand Louie's thought balloons, however, and still retains many dog-like characteristics such as a love of eating garbage and carrion. Raymond was originally depicted as belonging to the villainous Cecilia and serving as a henchman in her schemes against Crow's crew, but like Cecilia he gradually became friends with Crow and continued as a regular even after Cecilia's departure from the cast.
  • The cartoonist - often appears at his drawing table with a sign saying "Overboard, Inc." Whenever Charley comes into his office asking for a raise, he draws a sea monster to eat him.
  • Janey - a mermaid that Crow has developed a friendship with (and romantic feelings for). However, she and Crow both acknowledge the difficulties posed by their differences, such as Janey's preference for worms as pizza topping.
  • The sea monster - a giant Godzilla-like creature that shows up now and then to terrorize Crow's ship. Not to be confused with the tentacle that is usually drawn in as a practical joke by the cartoonist. In the March 22, 2008 strip, it is revealed that his name is "Gork" and that he is in love with Janey the mermaid.
  • Scratch the Green Ship's cat. Scratch wants very much to eat the mice.
  • The mice - normal-sized but talking mice that live on the ship. A female mouse, Ellie, has unrequited romantic feelings for Captain Crow, much to the annoyance of her boyfriend, Jonas. At first, none of the human crew could understand the mice, hearing only squeaks or very tiny voices; generally leaving the translations to Raymond. Over time, the humans began to understand the mice without any difficulty, leaving Louie the animal that can't speak aloud. Recently, the mice have taken on more and more human like quality, including a recent strip showing a large quantity of mouse holes for sale as a result of foreclosure, as well as the mice playing human sports, like hockey (albeit, with miniature equipment, played on the ship's kiddie pool, filled with frozen water.) The mice have also taken to driving tiny cars around the ship; which has resulted in them incurring traffic violations, largely due to them ramming into one of the human crew (generally Crow, who in one strip, revealed his foot was in a cast as a result of such a crash). The traffic violations have in turn resulted in Crow acting as jailer for some of the mice, as they pay their "debt to society". The mice fly miniature fighter aircraft which they use to fly to the Green Ship and attack Scratch.
  • The rabbits - large, anthropomorphic talking rabbits who frequently sneak onto the ship at night to steal from Charley's vegetable garden.
  • Seahawk - originally depicted as Crow's second in command, Seahawk has not been seen in the strip in recent years.
  • Boof - a wimpy pirate, often a target of Charley and Seahawk. Not seen in recent years.
  • Marlene - a woman who once served as a love interest for Charley. Not seen in recent years.
  • The crow's nest pirates - A pair of unnamed pirates who occupied the crow's nest of the "Revenge". Not seen in recent years.
Overboard

Overboard may refer to:

  • Man overboard; a situation where a person goes over the side of a ship or boat into the water, possibly needing rescue
  • Overboard (1987 film), a 1987 movie starring Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell
  • Overboard (comic strip), a comic strip about a group of pirates
  • Overboard!, a 1997 video game published by Psygnosis
  • Overboard (a cappella), an all-male a cappella group from New England
Overboard (film)

Overboard is a 1987 American romantic comedy film directed by Garry Marshall, written by Leslie Dixon, and starring Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell and produced by Roddy McDowall (who costars). The film's soundtrack was composed by Alan Silvestri. In turn, it was adapted into the 2006 South Korean television series, Couple or Trouble. In recent years, it has become popular via cable television and has gained a cult following.

Overboard (a cappella)

Overboard is an a cappella group based in Boston, MA.

Usage examples of "overboard".

He remembered the time a drunken deckhand on a Canadian hydrofoil had threatened to throw some passengers overboard.

So they all pitched in to help take down the mainmast, laying it out along the decking, folding up the sails and spars and tucking them away, and tossing overboard the extra supplies they could afford to let go.

I had planned to go overboard in the night, quiet-like, but when I saw ye trapped by the rail I just upped on the mainsheet and swung over like a capuchin on a vine.

It may be worth our while, however, to note that many modern mystics are not monists, and that the supposed inseparable connection between Mysticism and Monism is being thrown overboard.

BURIED TREASURE After the escape of the girl Barunda and Ninaka had fallen out over that affair and the division of the treasure, with the result that the panglima had slipped a knife between the ribs of his companion and dropped the body overboard.

Two of the parse tubes together with their diapson crystals had been torn free and lost overboard.

This Plater began to shovel overboard, working with furious energy, as though combating a hated enemy.

He wore them a whole week, and it was only when he began systematically to refurnish the radio shack that he threw them overboard.

The least he would have expected from her was a letter from a screever, slightly worn and faded and perhaps even somewhat tearstained, purporting to come from the captain of the vessel from which her imagined husband had been swept overboard and to testify to this tragic event.

He assumed that John Shipton, having been caught in an attempt to hide aboard the yacht, had leaped overboard.

It was the same route that Shipton had taken after his fake leap overboard.

It had just occurred to him that Tom Too might have become alarmed and slain the three captives, shoving their bodies overboard.

Again and again she flung out the coverlet into the surrounding water, and each time she hauled it in, the pattering leks reflected her excitement in the catch, which she sorted and slung either overboard or into the well of the boat.

When the two Trackers shook off their stupefication and started for her, a tentacle came across the railing, dragged them overboard and left them thrashing in the water alongside.

It was evident that this chest had been thrown overboard from some dismasted vessel driven towards the island, and that, in the hope that it would reach the land, where they might afterwards find it, the passengers had taken the precaution to buoy it up by means of this floating apparatus.