Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Overacted.
Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Overacted and, of course, Overacted synonyms and on the right images related to the word Overacted.
Overact
Overact O`ver*act", v. t.
1. To act or perform to excess; to exaggerate in acting; as,
he overacted his part.
2. To act upon, or influence, unduly. [Obs.]
The hope of inheritance overacts them. --Milton.
Overact
Overact O`ver*act", v. i.
To act more than is necessary; to go to excess in action.
--B. Jonson.
Meaning of Overacted from wikipedia
-
Overacting (also
called hamming,
mugging or
chewing the scenery) is
exaggerated acting,
positively or negatively. Some
roles require overly-exaggerated...
-
Overactive bladder (OAB) is a
common condition where there is a
frequent feeling of
needing to
urinate to a
degree that it
negatively affects a person's...
- This
disposition is an attempt, at
least in part, to
better describe "
overactive imagination" or "living in a
dream world". An
individual with this trait...
-
otherwise specified (PDD-NOS),
childhood disintegrative disorder (CDD),
overactive disorder ****ociated with
mental ****ation and
stereotyped movements...
- (DSD) (the ICS
standard terminology agreed 1998) and
neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO)) is a
consequence of a
neurological pathology such as
spinal injury...
-
improper regulation of the
basal ganglia–thalamocortical circuitry.
Overactivity of a
direct pathway combined with
decreased activity of
indirect pathway...
- is
structurally similar to
thyroxine and may
cause either under-or
overactivity of the thyroid.[citation needed]
Postpartum thyroiditis (PPT) occurs...
- and skin,
hyperpigmentation of the skin (lentiginosis), and
endocrine overactivity. It is
distinct from
Carney triad.
Approximately 7% of all
cardiac myxomas...
-
Vesicare among others, is a
medicine used to
treat overactive bladder and
neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO). It may help with incontinence,
urinary frequency...
- Shakespeare. It is
spoken by
Queen Gertrude in
response to the
insincere overacting of a
character in the play
within a play
created by
Prince Hamlet to elicit...