overdo
overdo — verb
1. to pass a sensible limit in what you do, use, or say, so the effect becomes too
to pass a sensible limit in what you do, use, or say, so the effect becomes too strong, too much, or less believable.
Jonas overdid the garlic, and the soup tasted too strong.
pattern: overdo + ingredient
For the school play, Nina overdid her makeup and looked much older.
pattern: overdo + makeup
The ad overdoes the problem to make the product seem necessary.
After two extra shifts, Marco had overdone things and needed a day off.
At birthday parties, Uncle Ray always overdoes it and buys huge cakes.
- exaggerate
best when facts, feelings, or effects are made bigger than they really are
- overstate
more formal and especially used for claims, risks, or numbers
- overuse
narrower, only about using something too often or too much
- go too far
informal and broad, often judging behavior in general
- hold back
to stay controlled and avoid doing too much
- understate
to make something seem smaller or less serious than it is
文法句型
overdo + food/detail/praise
overdo it / overdo things
用法筆記
Often takes an object naming food, decoration, praise, or emotion. When the exact action is obvious from context, speakers also use overdo it or sometimes overdo on its own.