Sentence examples for overexposure from inspiring English sources

Dictionary

overexposure

noun

Excessive exposure.

Exact(60)

But beneath them are a handful of giant conglomerates that are struggling towards profits, a tier of middling banks with overexposure to risky assets, and a vast base of small banks in deep, deep trouble.

These include smoking (which, through the carcinogenic chemicals it creates, causes 86% of lung cancer, 65% of oesophageal cancer, 37% of bladder cancer and 29% of pancreatic cancer), poor diet (51% of stomach cancer and 56% of head and neck cancer), overexposure to sunlight (86% of malignant melanomas) and infection with papilloma virus (almost 100% of cervical cancer).

From there he played with solarisation, a kind of overexposure.

That was supposed to have shielded the state from its overexposure to the dollar.True to his state's frontiersman character, Mr Weatherill is looking towards a brighter tomorrow.

It is a technical debate; overexposure can lead one to forget why growth matters in the first place.

This reduces their chance of causing overexposure while still retaining information about highlights in the picture.

There is also a danger that overexposure could damage the firms' underground credentials.

Vuitton's senior executives at the time were against the idea, fearing that adding fashion could undermine a timeless image, but Mr Arnault's move proved successful.To avoid overexposure of its signature "Monogram" print, Vuitton has taken care to develop a wide range of products and other patterns.

Because no specific treatment is available for most of these toxic manifestations, preventing overexposure is important.

Occupational health practice is concerned with monitoring the concentration of toxic substances in the environment, determining safe exposure levels, suggesting procedures to limit worker exposure, and monitoring workers for signs of overexposure.

Sunburn, acute cutaneous inflammation caused by overexposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation of the so-called UVB wavelength band (290 320 nanometre; a nanometre is 10-9 metre), which originates from sunlight or artificial sources.

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