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Free sign up"hyper" is a correct and usable word in written English.
It is an adjective meaning "excessively active or energetic" or "very intense or extreme." For example, "He was hyper when he heard the news of his promotion."
Dictionary
hyper
noun
Short for hyperspace
Exact(2)
I am sorely tempted to start an online appeal to send Richard Templar to meet the uber-successful, hyper go-getting, and sartorially-off-the-wall residents of the Silicone Roundabout in Shoreditch.
We can appreciate how mood swings and hyper highs are an overpowering part of bipolar disorder, but what lies at his core is far more irritating – his true self.
Similar(58)
He said companies faced severe fines or closure if they failed to comply with new rules on payment of wages, standards of accommodation and other aspects of the employment of migrant workers in the hyper-wealthy Gulf emirate.
The Last of England sold for less than it should, and Brown's hyper-sensitivity also meant that he tended to crash up against the institutions and people who would have done him most good.
68ff8d24-c6e8-45f4-8dbd-c453d458b9c9 If anyone's to blame for the modern-day cult of "personal productivity" – the ceaseless barrage of books and listicles promising tips for keeping your head above water in our hyper-busy era – then it's probably David Allen.
The International Monetary Fund estimate of a 5.5% decline in gross domestic product this year looks wildly optimistic given hyper-inflation and the devastation caused to the eastern half of the country.
The dichotomy people always cited was between Russell Crowe and Leonardo DiCaprio – the former embodied the hyper-masculinised, "gorilla-like" (it's a technical term) face, the latter a face that was considered as feminine as you could get, before you looked so female that you freaked people out.
You may not, it is conceivable, be hyper-aware that 31 October 2014 is the inaugural World Cities Day.
As someone who has experienced the music industry first hand, the points O'Connor made about its fickle nature and how hyper-sexualisation of women roars throughout, to some extent, are correct.
Where Dunham's Horvath seems to exist, with all her hyper-neuroses and anxiety, in a world surrounded by her physical opposites without ever verbally acknowledging it, Lahiri goes the other way: she lands self-deprecating jokes about her weight, her lopsided breasts, her relationship with her nose-trimmer ("see you in 20 minutes") and her sweatiness (men's deodorant only, please).
Brown's work has none of the hyper-loveliness of the pre-Raphaelites with whom his name is so often bracketed, even though he was never a formal member of the Brotherhood, that group of seven excitable young men who made a pact in 1848 to revolutionise English art by returning it to the purity of the 14th century.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com