exaggeration
exaggeration — 名詞
- exaggerationsingular
- exaggerationsplural
1. the practice of describing something as being far bigger, more serious, or more
誇張;誇大
將事物描述為比實際更誇大
the practice of describing something as being far bigger, more serious, or more extreme than it truly is; or a specific example of such a description
Tanvi's claim that she read a hundred books in one month was a clear exaggeration.
Tanvi 說她一個月讀了一百本書,這顯然是誇張。
countable: an exaggeration — a specific overstatement
The politician's speech was full of exaggeration about falling crime rates.
那位政治人物的演說充滿了對犯罪率下降的誇大之詞。
uncountable: full of exaggeration — describing speech
It is no exaggeration to say that Dr. Okafor saved the patient's life that night.
可以毫不誇張地說,Okafor 醫生那天晚上救了那位病人的命。
With only a slight exaggeration, Hassan said his catch was as long as his arm.
Hassan 只是稍微誇張了一下,說他釣到的那條魚跟他的手臂一樣長。
Local news reports sometimes contain wild exaggerations that mislead the public.
地方新聞報導有時會出現誤導大眾的誇張說法。
- overstatement
the closest synonym; focuses on the act of going beyond the truth
- hyperbole
more formal and literary; denotes deliberate rhetorical exaggeration, not necessarily intended to deceive
- embellishment
focuses on adding decorative details to a story rather than distorting the core truth
- understatement
the opposite — representing something as smaller or less important than it really is
文法句型
it is no exaggeration + to-infinitive
an exaggeration
exaggeration + about + noun phrase
exaggerations (plural countable)
用法筆記
Common in the fixed phrase 'it is no exaggeration to say that…', which signals that the speaker believes the claim is literally true, despite its dramatic wording. The plural form 'exaggerations' is used for multiple specific overstated claims.