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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
overrun
I.verb
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Heavy rains caused Stoney Creek to overrun its banks earlier today.
▪ Soviet troops overran the nation in 1940.
▪ Vines of morning glory overran the rainforest canopy.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A combination of army support and neutrality enabled the demonstrators to overrun both buildings with minimal losses.
▪ Always finish on time, unless there is a very good reason to overrun.
▪ But they were cut from the programme after it overran by 10 minutes.
▪ Guerrillas had overrun the exploration camp and set the rig afire.
▪ Had they been 10 or 15 minutes later, I believe we would have been completely overrun.
▪ Mr Mellor claimed the builder overran his budget.
▪ Projects have become symbols of the ghetto, isolated from society and jobs, overrun by gangs and drugs.
▪ Weedy morning-glory vines overran the rainforest canopy.
II.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
cost
▪ There are two main problems with fast-track projects: design changes and cost overruns.
▪ They track and control construction costs to avoid cost overruns.
▪ A public service agency spends so much time studying the financial implications of a project that cost overruns are virtually guaranteed.
▪ Almost from the start the cost overruns were as staggering as the project itself.
▪ The accountants found that cost overruns surpassed $ 25 million, the lawsuit says.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A public service agency spends so much time studying the financial implications of a project that cost overruns are virtually guaranteed.
▪ A real bargain, with lovely owners, two beautiful overrun gardens and some quite well-preserved original features.
▪ Cost overruns for overtime for both the police and fire departments has been a chronic problem for years.
▪ Naturally shortfalls and overruns occur when one year is compared with the next.
▪ Or mechanical extractor ventilation capable of providing at least three air changes per hour and operating with 15-minute overrun after activation.
▪ There are two main problems with fast-track projects: design changes and cost overruns.
▪ They track and control construction costs to avoid cost overruns.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Overrun

Overrun \O`ver*run"\, v. t. [imp. Overran; p. p. Overrun; p. pr. & vb. n. Overrunning. ]

  1. To run over; to grow or spread over in excess; to invade and occupy; to take possession of; as, the vine overran its trellis; the farm is overrun with witch grass.

    Those barbarous nations that overran the world.
    --Spenser.

  2. To exceed in distance or speed of running; to go beyond or pass in running.

    Ahimaaz ran by the way of the plain, and overran Cushi.
    --2 Sam. xviii. 2

  3. 3. To go beyond; to extend in part beyond; as, one line overruns another in length.

    Note: In machinery, a sliding piece is said to overrun its bearing when its forward end goes beyond it.

  4. To abuse or oppress, as if by treading upon.

    None of them the feeble overran.
    --Spenser.

  5. (Print.)

    1. To carry over, or back, as type, from one line or page into the next after, or next before.

    2. To extend the contents of (a line, column, or page) into the next line, column, or page.

Overrun

Overrun \O`ver*run"\, v. i.

  1. To run, pass, spread, or flow over or by something; to be beyond, or in excess.

    Despised and trodden down of all that overran.
    --Spenser.

  2. (Print.) To extend beyond its due or desired length; as, a line, or advertisement, overruns.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
overrun

Old English oferyrnan; see over- + run (v.). The noun meaning "excess expenditure over budget" is from 1956. Related: Overran; overrunning.

Wiktionary
overrun

n. 1 An instance of overrunning 2 The amount by which something overruns vb. 1 To defeat an enemy and invade in great numbers, seizing his positions conclusively. 2 To infest, swarm over, flow over.

WordNet
overrun
  1. adj. (often followed by `with' or used in combination) troubled by or encroached upon in large numbers; "waters infested with sharks"; "shark-infested waters"; "the locust-overrun countryside"; "drug-plagued streets" [syn: infested, plagued]

  2. n. too much production or more than expected [syn: overproduction]

  3. v. invade in great numbers; "the roaches infested our kitchen" [syn: infest]

  4. occupy in large numbers or live on a host; "the Kudzu plant infests much of the South and is spreading to the North" [syn: invade, infest]

  5. flow or run over (a limit or brim) [syn: overflow, well over, run over, brim over]

  6. seize the position of and defeat; "the Crusaders overran much of the Holy Land"

  7. run beyond or past; "The plane overran the runway"

  8. [also: overrunning, overran]

Wikipedia
Overrun

Overrun may refer to:

  • Overrun brake
  • Overrun, the condition of a vehicle travelling without throttle, see freewheel
  • Buffer overrun, see buffer overflow
  • Overrun is the section of a runway, sometimes called a blast pad, that is used as an emergency space to slowly stop planes after an aborted takeoff or a problem on landing
  • Cost overrun
  • Overrun is the amount of air injected into soft serve ice creams
  • Over-Run, a fictional Transformers character

Usage examples of "overrun".

Rome was much affrighted when it looked as if the Mongols would overrun Europe.

Winter came and passed, and with Spring their assault was renewed: Dimbar was overrun, and the Men of Brethil were afraid, for evil roamed now upon all their borders, save in the south.

A green and smoldering painting of an ancient ruin overgrown with writhing plants that seemed to have eyes and purpose and a malevolently jolly life of their own, as they swarmed and slithered and overran the stone vaults and altars of the twisted, disturbingly resonant sepulcher.

And that would be a more serious matter than overrunning an Italy taken by surprise and abandoned by its Axis allies.

Turkey, once defended by air power, would have the means perhaps of deterring Germany from overrunning Bulgaria and quelling Greece, and of counterbalancing the Russian fear of the German armies.

We could not expect any further large windfalls of vessels such as those which had followed the overrunning of Norway, Denmark, and the Low Countries in the spring of 1940.

Mussolini-Hitler crime of overrunning Greece, and our effort to stand against tyranny and save what we could from its claws, appealed profoundly to the people of the United States, and above all to the great man who led them.

The manner in which the German troop concentrations in Rumania and Bulgaria had been glozed over and apparently accepted by the Soviet Government, the evidence we had of large and invaluable supplies being sent to Germany from Russia, the obvious community of interest between the two countries in overrunning and dividing the British Empire in the East, all made it seem more likely that Hitler and Stalin would make a bargain at our expense rather than a war upon each other.

After that, Kurdish resistance largely collapsed and Republican Guard task forces were able to push out along the main roads quickly and without significant casualties, overrunning even the distant city of as-Sulaymaniyyah in northeastern Iraq just a few days later.

During the night of August 31, the Iraqis struck, overrunning Arbil in a few hours with the help of KDP forces.

A force of four to six divisions along with a couple of ACRs and extra aviation brigades should have little difficulty overrunning the Iraqi armed forces and conquering the country, but it never hurts to be certain, and in this situation we need to be certain.

If not, how could the Allies prevent the German Army from quickly overrunning Poland?

But more important than that, Stalin still afforded him the opportunity of fighting a one-front war, of concentrating all his military might in the west for a knockout blow against France and Britain and the overrunning of Belgium and Holland, after which - well, Hitler had already told his generals what he had in mind.

Hitler and his lieutenants began to clutch at a straw of hope: that the Allies would fall out, that Britain and America would become frightened of the prospect of the Red armies overrunning Europe and in the end join Germany to protect the old Continent from Bolshevism.

A peace now would also prevent the Russians from overrunning Germany and Bolshevizing it.