Lexicographical Neighbors of Overimpressed
Literary usage of Overimpressed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Friendly Arctic: The Story of Five Years in Polar Regions by Vilhjalmur Stefansson (1921)
"Or it is possible that they are overimpressed with the views of certain dietitians
and are afraid of an excess of protein. However that may be, ..."
2. Public Opinion by Walter Lippmann (1922)
"... a healthy young man because he is sentimentally overimpressed with an im- 1
In a review of The Salvaging of Civilization, The Literary Review of the NY ..."
3. Preliminary Economic Studies of the War by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Division of Economics and History (1919)
"... but rather belong to that large class of the American people, to be found in
a considerable number in any intelligent democracy, who are overimpressed ..."
4. British War Administration by John Archibald Fairlie (1919)
"... who are overimpressed with the temporary success of a new political or social
experiment carried on under pretty definite conditions, ..."
5. Full Up and Fed Up: The Worker's Mind in Crowded Britain by Whiting Williams (1921)
"It is the highly intellectual training of these last that is said by some to have
overimpressed many American investigators with the vision and constructive ..."
6. Domesticated Animals and Plants: A Brief Treatise Upon the Origin and by Eugene Davenport (1910)
"... he should not choose it suddenly or impulsively, as do some, when overimpressed
with a particularly striking display at the fair. ..."
7. Management and Men: A Record of New Steps in Industrial Relations by Meyer Bloomfield (1919)
"... and there is no sovereign state in that great field of occupation. If a manager
become bumptious and overimpressed with his authority he is going to ..."
8. Race Decadence: An Examination of the Causes of Racial Degeneracy in the by William Samuel Sadler (1922)
"They are overimpressed with everything that happens, not excepting their own
thoughts and feelings. 4. Increased emotionalism.— They often cry if you point ..."