Media can sometimes exaggerate events or issues to attract more viewers or readers. Sensationalizing stories or focusing on extreme cases can distort the reality of a situation. It's important to consume news from a variety of sources to get a more balanced perspective.
Nobody trusted Susan as she always tended to exaggerate anything she said. It is a natural tendency of every fisherman to exaggerate the size of his catch. The media like to exaggerate the truth, it helps them sell newspapers.
"Prone to exaggerate" means someone who has a tendency to overemphasize or overstate things, making them seem more dramatic or extreme than they really are.
Exaggerate is used to overstate or embellish something, while said is a simple way to indicate who is speaking. For example, "she exaggerated that she had a million things to do" can't be replaced with "she said that she had a million things to do" as it changes the meaning.
You exaggerate = Exageras
Don't exaggerate the risks!
Exaggerate is a verb."That's a nice story, Lisa, but please don't exaggerate."
exaggerate, --d, --tion
Exaggeration is the abstract noun for exaggerate
How do Sam and Eric exaggerate what they saw
yea you get in trouble for something you didn't do. one thing to exaggerate, it another to OVER exaggerate.): trust me i no how it feels!
Synonyms of exaggerate include embellish, overstate, over stress, inflate, amplify.
the over exaggerated about the game but it wasn't that cool Extremists often exaggerate social issues in their speeches....