Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Very highly
dramatic .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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The earliest paintings on wood Mr. Rockman's preference to canvas look great in the hyperdramatic, elongated galleries of the Wexner.
An Illustrative Career Depicting Dystopias Sidney Lawrence 2011
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This hyperdramatic black-and-white ad actually had very little punch.
Michael Maslansky: America Reacts: Dem Ads Outperform GOP Ads on Economy and Jobs Michael Maslansky 2010
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This hyperdramatic black-and-white ad actually had very little punch.
Michael Maslansky: America Reacts: Dem Ads Outperform GOP Ads on Economy and Jobs Michael Maslansky 2010
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This hyperdramatic black-and-white ad actually had very little punch.
Michael Maslansky: America Reacts: Dem Ads Outperform GOP Ads on Economy and Jobs Michael Maslansky 2010
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This hyperdramatic black-and-white ad actually had very little punch.
Michael Maslansky: America Reacts: Dem Ads Outperform GOP Ads on Economy and Jobs Michael Maslansky 2010
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This hyperdramatic black-and-white ad actually had very little punch.
Michael Maslansky: America Reacts: Dem Ads Outperform GOP Ads on Economy and Jobs Michael Maslansky 2010
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Though they may look like hyperdramatic pieces of expressionist sculpture in carefully composed photographs of their exteriors, the most successful Lautner houses tend to be humane and welcoming inside, where the architect thoughtfully attended to a thousand problems of daily living in carefully choreographed spaces that seem to grow more light-filled and life-enhancing at every turn.
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It somehow manages to be both hyperdramatic (the nosebleeds and kidnapping) and maddeningly tempest-in-a-teacup (Sunako turned goth because some boy said he didn't like her--oh, angst!)
How to kill 15 minutes of your lunch hour. bradamant 2005
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To me, it sounds like being a five-year-old: hyperdramatic, hyperkinetic, sugar-soaked.
The Stencil caps 2010
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A hyperdramatic scene by Millet, "The Gust of Wind," portrays the moment a tree is ripped up by its roots, hovering menacingly over a cowering shepherd - an apocalyptic view of nature.
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