overstated
/ˌəʊ.vəˈsteɪt/ (bre, ipa) · [ˈovɚstˌetɪd] /ˌoʊ.vɚˈsteɪt/ (ame, ipa)
overstated — 動詞
1. past tense and past participle of 'overstate'; presented a fact, cost, or proble
誇大
把情況說得比實際更嚴重
past tense and past participle of 'overstate'; presented a fact, cost, or problem as larger or more serious than the evidence supported.
The minister overstated the expected savings in yesterday's radio interview.
那位部長在昨天的廣播訪談中誇大了預期節省的金額。
common object: savings / figures / benefits
In court, Ava overstated how badly the leak had damaged her shop.
在法庭上,Ava 誇大了漏水對她店面造成的損害有多嚴重。
pattern: overstated how badly + clause
The school notice overstated the danger from one minor roof crack.
那份學校通知誇大了一道輕微屋頂裂縫帶來的危險。
Joaquín overstated how much extra time the train repair would need.
Joaquín 誇大了這次火車維修還需要多少額外時間。
The risks were overstated in the first draft of the safety memo.
這些風險在那份安全備忘錄的初稿裡被誇大了。
- exaggerated
broader and less formal, often used for stories, emotions, or effects as well as facts
- inflated
often used for numbers, costs, prices, or importance made too large
- overplayed
often suggests giving too much weight to a risk, problem, or advantage
- magnified
can be more figurative, making a small issue seem larger than it is
- understated
made something sound smaller or less serious than it really was
- downplayed
made something seem less important, often on purpose
文法句型
overstated + risk/cost/problem
overstated how much/how badly + clause
be overstated
用法筆記
Usually takes a direct object naming a risk, cost, result, or problem, or a clause showing degree such as 'how much' or 'how badly'. This form is common in reports, interviews, and legal or political discussion, and it also appears in the passive when a claim is said to sound too strong.