Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"overcorrect" Definitions
  1. to make too much of a correction : to adjust too much in attempting to offset an error, miscalculation, or problem

39 Sentences With "overcorrect"

How to use overcorrect in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "overcorrect" and check conjugation/comparative form for "overcorrect". Mastering all the usages of "overcorrect" from sentence examples published by news publications.

We'll overcorrect for some past mistakes, and make some new ones.
It's very important that we stand by our values and don't try to overcorrect.
But I still feel like Bungie continues to undershoot and then overcorrect in cyclical fashion.
On the plus side, today's reformers have fewer reasons than in the past to overcorrect.
I mean if there's any lesson they should learn, I think it should be overcorrect.
And some phones overcorrect so much that you might not like the stabilization effect at all.
Sometimes, there's the added layer of then wanting to overcorrect by smothering the person with attention.
And Galloway has some advice for CEO Mark Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg: address, acknowledge and overcorrect.
Siefers told "Power Lunch " the risk at this point is that Wells Fargo may overcorrect to the downside.
"The common theme among parties seeking to make rules changes to alter future outcomes is to overcorrect," Putnam told me.
And when I caught myself drifting, my instinctual reaction was to overcorrect, and slam myself into the center of the lane.
"There's absolutely a risk that the political pressure will be effective and that the media platforms will try to overcorrect," said Benkler.
Given the mixed nature of non-neutral practices, prescriptive net neutrality regulation would overcorrect by prohibiting beneficial practices along with harmful practices.
I've used the Droid for over a week and I still overcorrect when I pick it up because I'm used to something heavier.
Rachel Wright, a New York City-based therapist said it's possible you're using your current relationship to overcorrect for past relationships you described as unstable.
And then the key is to overcorrect, to clear the shelves of every bottle of Tylenol even though it was an isolated incident in Chicago.
You need to increasingly swing and overcorrect for that overprotection, that vigilance, instead of that obsession with building and writing the next line of code.
She said that he was driving and he hit a curb or something and he tried to overcorrect the bus, and caused it to flip over.
"It's important for banks not to overcorrect and not to forget that people like to interact face to face," said Vivek Pandya, lead analyst at Adobe Digital Insights.
Andrew Chang, the lead author of the study, told me he's worried that in the response to the opioid crisis, we may overcorrect and limit opioids too much.
The ordeal highlights what was a pattern of Warren's campaign that sometimes hurt her: She was hypersensitive to public criticism and tended to overcorrect in her efforts to ensure her competence.
Knowing that my days of elaborate cooking were at least temporarily behind me, I decided to overcorrect and lean in to the food I'd been avoiding: the convenient, flash-frozen, cheap meals of Trader Joe's.
In 2014, a group of 28 Harvard Law School professors took the unprecedented step of writing a letter pushing back on the Obama guidance, saying it had caused Harvard's administration to overcorrect to the extreme.
However, the historic intervention into the election by James Comey means three major things: Academic research will eventually yield important findings, but there is the potential for Democrats to overcorrect following this historic presidential loss.
And while his arguments about a Trump-induced boom are overstated, it's a mistake for Trump's critics to overcorrect by pretending his policies have nothing to do with the good news we've seen this year.
This makes a lot of sense, since drivers often tend to overcorrect in these instances when left to their own devices, leading to problems like ending up in a ditch beyond the shoulder or even rollovers.
For instance, in 2014, a group of 28 Harvard Law School professors took the unprecedented step of writing a letter pushing back on the Obama guidance, saying it had caused Harvard's administration to overcorrect to the extreme.
That's because, thanks to our hyped-up, politically overcorrect, point-fingers-and-yell society, there is almost no Halloween costume you can wear without offending somebody, being ridiculed on the internet, perhaps even losing your job. Yeah!
"If you overcorrect now, the cost of doing so is relatively minimal when you consider that the alternative is you gradually discover that you've gone out of business," Olsen said in a video message to portfolio company CEOs.
"If you overcorrect now, the cost of doing so is relatively minimal when you consider that the alternative is you gradually discover that you've gone out of business," said Chris Olsen in a video message to portfolio company founders.
You want that story to be true, and I think about this a lot, both as someone who makes content and puts on conferences and does podcasts, I'm always trying to overcorrect for the fact that I talk to almost exclusively white guys.
This is a case in which the left-wing critics of American foreign policy are mostly wrong, their justifiable historical skepticism of American interventionism leading them to overcorrect and attack a legitimate effort to deal with a crisis created by a truly evil government.
"If we overcorrect too much and we take away the ability to reach people who might be less intrinsically engaged in politics, then we also lose the capacity to try to make them excited about participating in politics," said Daniel Kreiss, an associate professor at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who studies political microtargeting.
Video copy control schemes such as Macrovision exploit this, inserting spikes in the pulse which will be ignored by most television sets, but cause a VCR's AGC to overcorrect and corrupt the recording.
"Book Review: The Schreiber Theory". Variety, April 15, 2006. In an interview with Kipen, film writer Michael Fox said Schreiberism seemed less an attempt to discredit auteur theory outright than a ploy to "simply shift the auteur appellation from directors to screenwriters". Kipen's reply was that there was an element of "parody" in his writer-centred theory, in that he hoped to "overcorrect" the director-centred model in such a way that "the final average of the two is a more realistic representation".
The most serious problem in information flow arises when the delay in feedback is exactly one- half cycle, for then the corrective action is superimposed on a variation from norm which, at that moment, is in the same direction as that of the correction. This causes the system to overcorrect, and then if the reverse adjustment is made out of cycle, to correct too much in the other direction, and so on until the system fluctuates ("oscillates") out of control. This phenomenon is illustrated in Figure 1. “Oscillation and Feedback”.
That often happened, for he welcomed questions: he took his students seriously. (The informality between teaching staff and students was another reason for him to move to Cornell.) He used those occasions to discuss problems on which his research was focusing, which often took his students to the outer edge of modern linguistic research. As a thesis supervisor, he was anything but heavy-handed. He respected his students too much to overcorrect what they wrote, and he did not mind if they took positions with which he disagreed or if they following methods that were not his.
The success of postwarnings depends on the motivation of the individual to be accurate and the individual's perceived threat of being unduly influenced. Even in the face of these postwarnings, many individuals still show memory conformity. Earlier research had shown that postwarnings can cause witnesses to overcorrect their memory exclusion and to neglect to report correct memories that were appropriately gained during the time or experience in question. In a 2009 experiment, participants were first shown a crime video and then presented with non-witnessed details (details not in the original video) either through a discussion group, by reading a report, or by watching another version of the video.
The perpetrator was characterized as a result of further investigations by police psychologists as "brutal, aggressive, emotionally cold, a loner, sexually disturbed, mentally ill, choleric, overcorrect" and "introverted". The investigators assumed that he had been a non-smoker, that he could divide his own time and would be not have missed a day from work. The examinations of a number of persons, for example patients of the closed psychiatry who had an exit at the time of the crime, as well as the guests of pensions, hotels and spas in the nearby Bad Bevensen did not lead further. Likewise, the review of all vehicle owners to license plates was unsuccessful, which had been recorded in any way at the time of the authorities.

No results under this filter, show 39 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.