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Exaggeration   /ɪgzˌædʒərˈeɪʃən/   Listen
Exaggeration

noun
1.
Extravagant exaggeration.  Synonym: hyperbole.
2.
The act of making something more noticeable than usual.
3.
Making to seem more important than it really is.  Synonyms: magnification, overstatement.  Antonym: understatement.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Exaggeration" Quotes from Famous Books



... Russia, but not of Russia, for among its citizens, we are told, possibly with exaggeration, more than one-third (70,000) are Jews, besides 10,000 Greeks and Germans, and Italians in good number. It is unlike any other Russian city, for it is tolerably well paved, has plenty of drinking-water, and rows of trees—however stunted, wind-nipped, and sickly—in every street. It is not Russian, ...
— Russia - As Seen and Described by Famous Writers • Various

... that exhibit such deplorable specimens as the runaway nuns, the apostate priests, the vicious Popes of Catholicism? How is it that tales are told of the iniquities of Catholicism such as are told of no other of the sects of Christendom? Allow for all the exaggeration you like, all the prejudice of historians, all the spitefulness of enemies, yet there surely remains sufficient Catholic criminality to show that at the best the Church is no better than any other religious body, and at ...
— Paradoxes of Catholicism • Robert Hugh Benson

... that the springs of his being have been poisoned, and he has no detergent to make them sweet. It is the fashion in our day to speak of the old description of "hell-deserving sinner" as marred by exaggeration, if not to say morbid. I do not fall into that fashion, for it expresses just what I am—a hell-deserving sinner. When the great Puritan, John Newton, saw a man taken out to be hanged, he said: "But for the grace of God there goes John Newton." ...
— Men in the Making • Ambrose Shepherd

... your hands over your head, turn red and pale, utter loud cries, shed tears, sob, and scold a coachman, postilions, perhaps even me. The event, would, nevertheless, be actually the same. Admit, then, madame, and you, too, Madame d'Hudicourt, that there is an exaggeration in your sorrow, and that you would have made, both ...
— The Memoirs of Madame de Montespan, Complete • Madame La Marquise De Montespan

... exaggerate, nor does the case stand in any need of exaggeration. I have described the wife's legal position, not her actual treatment. The laws of most countries are far worse than the people who execute them, and many of them are only able to remain laws by being seldom or never carried into effect. If married life were all that it ...
— The Subjection of Women • John Stuart Mill


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