美 [tu ɪɡˈzædʒəreɪt]
夸张
... self-inflicted 自己施加的;自己造成的 to exaggerate (v.) 夸大;夸张 sympathy (n.) 同情;怜悯 ...
... 言符其实 to stick to the facts (idiom) 言过其实 to overstate the facts; to exaggerate 严辞 stern words ...
... 快取扩充卡 cache card 扩大化 to extend the scope; to exaggerate 扩 enlarge ...
夸张
She has a propensity to exaggerate.
她爱言过其实。
He tends to exaggerate the difficulties.
他往往夸大困难。
It isn't that he lied exactly, but he did tend to exaggerate.
他不见得是真的说谎,但他的确是有意夸大。
I don't want to exaggerate this too much but the largest riots in Britain in the eighteenth century are not the riots for political reform at all.
我不想过多地夸张,但十八世纪英国最大的暴乱,完全不是关于政治改革
欧洲文明课程节选 : 耶鲁公开课
It's not occured to me that we shouldn't think fondly or even sort of exaggerate our past.
我也不认为,我们应该喜欢,或者甚至夸张我们的过去。
电影哲学课程节选 : 麻省理工公开课
Hyping your company is not just a natural tendency to exaggerate your size and importance.
We tend to exaggerate our differences and become extremely used to our own set of biases.
The importance of wine to this nation of four million is hard to exaggerate.