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单词 overproduce
释义

Definition of overproduce in English:

overproduce

verb əʊvəprəˈdjuːsˌoʊvərprəˈd(j)us
[with object]
  • 1Produce more of (a product or commodity) than is wanted or needed.

    our unplanned manufacturing system continually overproduces consumer products
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Some people, however, overproduce these helpers, resulting in excessive muscle and joint swelling.
    • These drugs make your body tissues more sensitive to insulin and keep your liver from overproducing glucose.
    • He and other critics contend that taxpayers are subsidizing mostly large operations that overproduce corn, wheat, soybeans, rice and cotton.
    • This is the first of a novel class of cancer drugs that targets an enzyme overproduced by many cancer cells.
    • Indeed, mice that overproduce growth hormone die sooner than normal mice, and fruit flies that underproduce growth hormone live longer than normal flies.
    • Researchers there figured out how to get plants to overproduce a hormone that ensures that if pollen from genetically modified crops drifts to other species, the resulting seeds won't germinate.
    • The patients who are likely to overproduce these inflammatory factors and to develop septic shock syndrome can be identified in a few hours by DNA scans.
    • Second, we test the male quality hypothesis, which suggests that females mated to attractive high-quality males should overproduce males.
    • The mice had been bred to overproduce a protein which had been implicated previously in tumor formation.
    • What's Going On: Allergies and colds can cause the membrane that lines your middle ear to become inflamed and overproduce mucus.
    • The problem is that their remarkable efficiency allows them to overproduce almost any commodity, so agriculture tends to lurch from surplus to surplus.
    • For example, among polygynous mammals, and thus among most primates, mothers in the best physical condition were originally expected to overproduce males.
    • He said: ‘We overproduce food in this country, and we have to sell it somewhere, so any large company with multi-national interests is going to be trying to get its food sold overseas.’
    • Mice that overproduce growth hormone live shorter lives.
    • In doing so it created disgustingly large food mountains, overproducing unwanted food simply to keep greedy farmers in business.
    • The researchers studied mice genetically engineered to overproduce a protein in the wall of the aorta, the body's primary artery.
    • Many of the largest corporations have overproduced their commodities.
    • Researchers have dramatically increased the life spans of mice by genetically engineering them to overproduce a protein called klotho.
    • Females could be engineered to overproduce human proteins of pharmaceutical interest in their milk, with production being turned on and off by the administration of hormones.
    • A common strategy is to overproduce cells and then eliminate those that are no longer needed or that are potentially dangerous to the animal.
  • 2often as adjective overproducedRecord or arrange (a song or piece of music) in such an elaborate way that the spontaneity or artistry of the original material is lost.

    a series of overproduced albums
    Example sentencesExamples
    • But for the most part, this band is overproduced and sounds tailor-made for all-hit radio, in the worst possible way.
    • But, this being 2003, they sound dated, overproduced and silly.
    • The resulting song feels overproduced and too distinctly current, and temporarily hinders the album's retro charm.
    • By foregoing drawn out studio time and overproduced songs, he really has ‘gotten back to basics’ albeit with a stronger launch pad than ever before.
    • The rest of the album, overproduced to the point of banality, barely registers as individual songs.
    • Far from being overproduced, the EP almost sounds like it was recorded off the floor, retaining a raw and simple feel that suits the guys and the noise they make.
    • Most of the stories are so pathetically ‘manufactured’ and overproduced.
    • She doesn't write the music or work the boards and yet she doesn't feel too slick or overproduced.
    • The title track, an echoey and bombastic pop ballad, was clearly overproduced, but rode all the way to No. 2 on the success of the film and the soundtrack.
    • Unfortunately, at times, the slickness of the series at times takes on the sterilized feel of a game show rather than a live and vibrant poker tournament - it's a little too overproduced.
    • And their gutter-laden, trashy sound is fresh and invigorating when every other punk band today overproduces their album into listless cookie-cutter status.
    • I've seen the glossy, overproduced, half-hour infomercials that pass for girls' cartoons.
    • It's a television set piece, something entirely formulaic, earnest, goody-goody, proud of itself, overproduced.
    • It's slick, overproduced, huge-guitar pop, but for stuff like that, it doesn't get much better.
    • Both of us feel that so many recordings are so overproduced today and we wanted to do something very simple and honest and beautiful.
    • Sure a lot of it is tepid, bland and overproduced, but hey, so's a lot of British music these days.
    • Just when it seems like it's going to turn bombastic or become overproduced and yawn-inducing, it surprises.
    • The band sounded slick and overproduced, and gone was that raw sound that distinguished the earlier albums.
    • The songs are more organic and not overproduced.
    • But the overall album is either cheesily overproduced or simply too lo-fi.
 
 

Definition of overproduce in US English:

overproduce

verbˌoʊvərprəˈd(j)usˌōvərprəˈd(y)o͞os
[with object]
  • 1Produce more of (a product or commodity) than is wanted or needed.

    our unplanned manufacturing system continually overproduces consumer products
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The patients who are likely to overproduce these inflammatory factors and to develop septic shock syndrome can be identified in a few hours by DNA scans.
    • The mice had been bred to overproduce a protein which had been implicated previously in tumor formation.
    • In doing so it created disgustingly large food mountains, overproducing unwanted food simply to keep greedy farmers in business.
    • For example, among polygynous mammals, and thus among most primates, mothers in the best physical condition were originally expected to overproduce males.
    • Researchers there figured out how to get plants to overproduce a hormone that ensures that if pollen from genetically modified crops drifts to other species, the resulting seeds won't germinate.
    • Indeed, mice that overproduce growth hormone die sooner than normal mice, and fruit flies that underproduce growth hormone live longer than normal flies.
    • Mice that overproduce growth hormone live shorter lives.
    • Many of the largest corporations have overproduced their commodities.
    • Some people, however, overproduce these helpers, resulting in excessive muscle and joint swelling.
    • Second, we test the male quality hypothesis, which suggests that females mated to attractive high-quality males should overproduce males.
    • The researchers studied mice genetically engineered to overproduce a protein in the wall of the aorta, the body's primary artery.
    • The problem is that their remarkable efficiency allows them to overproduce almost any commodity, so agriculture tends to lurch from surplus to surplus.
    • Females could be engineered to overproduce human proteins of pharmaceutical interest in their milk, with production being turned on and off by the administration of hormones.
    • These drugs make your body tissues more sensitive to insulin and keep your liver from overproducing glucose.
    • What's Going On: Allergies and colds can cause the membrane that lines your middle ear to become inflamed and overproduce mucus.
    • This is the first of a novel class of cancer drugs that targets an enzyme overproduced by many cancer cells.
    • He said: ‘We overproduce food in this country, and we have to sell it somewhere, so any large company with multi-national interests is going to be trying to get its food sold overseas.’
    • Researchers have dramatically increased the life spans of mice by genetically engineering them to overproduce a protein called klotho.
    • A common strategy is to overproduce cells and then eliminate those that are no longer needed or that are potentially dangerous to the animal.
    • He and other critics contend that taxpayers are subsidizing mostly large operations that overproduce corn, wheat, soybeans, rice and cotton.
  • 2often as adjective overproducedRecord or arrange (a song or piece of music) in such an elaborate way that the spontaneity or artistry of the original material is lost.

    a series of overproduced albums
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She doesn't write the music or work the boards and yet she doesn't feel too slick or overproduced.
    • Sure a lot of it is tepid, bland and overproduced, but hey, so's a lot of British music these days.
    • Just when it seems like it's going to turn bombastic or become overproduced and yawn-inducing, it surprises.
    • The rest of the album, overproduced to the point of banality, barely registers as individual songs.
    • The resulting song feels overproduced and too distinctly current, and temporarily hinders the album's retro charm.
    • Far from being overproduced, the EP almost sounds like it was recorded off the floor, retaining a raw and simple feel that suits the guys and the noise they make.
    • It's a television set piece, something entirely formulaic, earnest, goody-goody, proud of itself, overproduced.
    • By foregoing drawn out studio time and overproduced songs, he really has ‘gotten back to basics’ albeit with a stronger launch pad than ever before.
    • But for the most part, this band is overproduced and sounds tailor-made for all-hit radio, in the worst possible way.
    • I've seen the glossy, overproduced, half-hour infomercials that pass for girls' cartoons.
    • But, this being 2003, they sound dated, overproduced and silly.
    • The songs are more organic and not overproduced.
    • Unfortunately, at times, the slickness of the series at times takes on the sterilized feel of a game show rather than a live and vibrant poker tournament - it's a little too overproduced.
    • It's slick, overproduced, huge-guitar pop, but for stuff like that, it doesn't get much better.
    • Both of us feel that so many recordings are so overproduced today and we wanted to do something very simple and honest and beautiful.
    • The title track, an echoey and bombastic pop ballad, was clearly overproduced, but rode all the way to No. 2 on the success of the film and the soundtrack.
    • Most of the stories are so pathetically ‘manufactured’ and overproduced.
    • But the overall album is either cheesily overproduced or simply too lo-fi.
    • And their gutter-laden, trashy sound is fresh and invigorating when every other punk band today overproduces their album into listless cookie-cutter status.
    • The band sounded slick and overproduced, and gone was that raw sound that distinguished the earlier albums.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 9:15:44