夸大英语怎么说
- The power of red wine to counteract high cholesterol has been ballyhooed in the press.
- Amplified by the British tabloid press, Roberts's review provoked a ban on the book in the Indian state of Gujarat last month.
- The hole left by his own retirement is, he says, too often fussed over and inflated.
- XML has always had a lot of hype and confusion surrounding it.
- Sing or read aloud, exaggerating your lip movements.
- He said the medical dangers of early childbirth were greatly exaggerated.
- The fact is incredibly exaggerated.
- This sort of analysis is incredibly useful, and its value can't be overstated.
- Why might negotiators be more likely to lie to someone they envy?
- That's where we get this rousing line, "New Presbyter is but Old Priest writ Large."
- In many ways, our social statistics exaggerate the degree of hardship.
- Exaggerated claims merely fuel public distrust and disengagement.
- Emboldened, aid workers inflate Numbers of the starving.
- They tried to disguise the modesty of their achievements.
- He always tried to minimize his own faults, while exaggerating those of others.
- The book is both inaccurate and exaggerated.
- The danger comes when concerns are amplified or imagined, and hitched to Mahanite prescriptions.
- Some parents hesitate to take these steps because they suspect that their child is exaggerating.
- While I wouldn t want to chalk these reports up entirely to hysteria , I think we can safely say they re exaggerated.
- Such managers have an enormous stake in succeeding, so they invariably overstate the potential of their new technologies.
- Not everyone was convinced by such bombast.
- He thinks I'm exaggerating.
- Advertisers sometimes offset or counterbalance an exaggerated claim with a disclaimer—a qualification or condition on the claim.
- Politicians accuse the media of talking up the possibility of a riot.
- At a later news conference, he said differences should not be dramatized.