overcover
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English overcoveren, equivalent to over- + cover.
Verb
[edit]overcover (third-person singular simple present overcovers, present participle overcovering, simple past and past participle overcovered)
- (transitive) To cover over.
- The floodwaters soon overcovered the little hill.
- (transitive) To give too much coverage (as for example on television).
- 2009 May 3, Nicholas Kristof, “Bright Continent”, in New York Times[1]:
- You’ll never persuade me that we’ve overcovered the slaughter in Congo — our sin is that we didn’t scream enough, not that we screamed too much.