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exaggerated adjective [ ɪɡˈzadʒəreɪtɪd ]

• regarded or represented as larger, better, or worse than in reality.
• "an exaggerated account of his adventures"
Similar: overstated, overemphasized, inflated, magnified, amplified, aggrandized, excessive, hyperbolic, over-elaborate, overdone, overripe, overplayed, overdramatized, theatrical, dramatic, actorly, highly coloured, extravagant, melodramatic, sensational, sensationalist, sensationalistic, over the top, OTT, tall,
Opposite: understated,

exaggerate verb

• represent (something) as being larger, better, or worse than it really is.
• "he was apt to exaggerate any aches and pains"
Similar: overstate, overemphasize, overstress, overestimate, overvalue, magnify, amplify, aggrandize, inflate, embellish, embroider, colour, elaborate, over-elaborate, oversell, overdraw, overplay, dramatize, hyperbolize, add colour, stretch the truth, catastrophize, overpitch, pile it on, lay it on thick, lay it on with a trowel/shovel, make a drama out of a crisis, make a big thing of, shoot a line, draw the longbow,
Opposite: play down, understate,
Origin: mid 16th century: from Latin exaggerat- ‘heaped up’, from the verb exaggerare, from ex- ‘thoroughly’ + aggerare ‘heap up’ (from agger ‘heap’). The word originally meant ‘pile up, accumulate’, later ‘intensify praise or blame’, giving rise to current senses.


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