Dictionary
overstate
verb
To exaggerate; to state or claim too much.
Exact(8)
It's hard to overstate the prestige of this position.
Emile Hokayem, an analyst with the International Institute for Strategic Studies, says there is a tendency in the Gulf to overstate Iran's role and a tendency in the west to understate it.
"The problem is when companies overstate their purpose.
You cannot overstate the importance of patience as a young player in order to establish yourself, and that is something Stevie definitely had.
Related: 'People overstate the extent to which the law must change for new technology' On my way to work I cycle through Sheffield's Victorian graveyard, past the grave of a young man called Ben Littlewood.
We simply cannot overstate his importance to the side, nor the psychological effects his absence will have on his team-mates.
It is impossible to overstate the importance of music in Czechoslovakia between the wars, and the effervescence of culture in the Bohemian capital.
It's hard to overstate the impact of mobile technology on this transformation.
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