overadjectived
English
Alternative forms
- over-adjectived
Etymology
From over- + adjectived.
Adjective
overadjectived (comparative more overadjectived, superlative most overadjectived)
- Having too many adjectives.
- 1939, David Daiches, The Novel and the Modern World, Chicago, Ill.: The University of Chicago Press, published 1948, page 63:
- It is [Joseph] Conrad’s earliest style, a little lush, perhaps, a little overadjectived, but already the style of a man who knew how to subordinate the individual word to the total impression—a man who would always be the master, never the servant, of words[.]
- 1975, Lewis Leary, Soundings: Some Early American Writers, Athens, Ga.: The University of Georgia Press, →ISBN, page 183:
- Yet, as he stumbles through rhapsodic and overadjectived descriptions of the wild and lonely loveliness of nature, he reminds himself that simple phrasing is best.
- 1986, Richard Poole, Richard Hughes: Novelist, Poetry Wales Press, →ISBN, page 93:
- For a critic to declare these lines overadjectived and overwritten would not be a matter for surprise.
- 2016, Grace Helbig, Grace & Style: The Art of Pretending You Have It, Touchstone, →ISBN, page 89:
- You’re an avid Pinterester and you can’t resist a good brunch or over-adjective’d Starbucks order.
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