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"overthought" Antonyms

37 Sentences With "overthought"

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

"Jules's looks are not supposed to be overthought," Davy told Vulture.
It's an instinctive process, not overthought, and a highly personal one.
This objection, though persuasive in the abstract, struck me as politically overthought.
For more overthought opinions on social media, follow Wendy on Twitter and Instagram.
It's just a mess of twists twisting together in a fluid, but not overthought, way.
Facebook Messenger Lite is proof positive that we've overthought and over-engineered the modern messaging app.
Steak tartare, though, is slightly overthought, mixed with so many alliums that the flavor of the beef recedes.
It turns out that I (way) overthought this one: The answer is DIOR, of Christian DIOR design fame.
I tend to overthink it and if the overthought isn't represented in the song, then I don't usually like it.
But this show is best if not overthought; if you're going to make time for it, just enjoy the escapism.
It's true that the clues used ellipses and not blanks, and I clearly overthought what Paul Hunsberger had in mind.
The song writing came really naturally, and I think you can hear that in the album - nothing is forced or overthought.
Peggy had overthought herself to the point that she'd become brutally aware of it, yet she could not or would not stop.
The way text manipulation works on iPadOS is a series of overthought and overwrought changes that aim for the stars and reach the ditch.
The prank space on the internet has already been won, and it doesn't need any of your sponsored content, overthought angles, and trendhopping recaps.
I think we overthought it too much—we tried to make it too atmospheric and vibey when it should have just been a rock song.
" Then Benzoni volunteered a comparison that had already occurred to me: "Hillary and Al Gore both lost for the same reason: because they overthought things.
It's the final portion, especially, where the movie falls apart and makes little sense, even allowing that this isn't one of those projects meant to be overthought.
Double M, E, T, E, N, E. I hope nobody overthought this and added alternating double E's to their rule book today, come to think of it.
From the first day, I knew I wanted to model a positive relationship with food: one that wasn't precise, or overthought, or the center of my life.
" There is nothing overthought about these pieces, even when they reach toward what Joe Queenan calls a tendency to "find more in 'Peanuts' than was really there.
There was just that magic of doing something for the first time and I don't think anything was overthought because we didn't even know how to overthink it.
Clinton, a candidate so cautious that even the most innocuous personal details (her favorite TV shows, for example) can seem overthought, and, as a result, come off as overwrought.
In reality it meant that I overthought and second-guessed every decision because I thought it had to be "perfect" — in hindsight, I wish I had realized that "good" was fine!
He overthought how to direct the actors in this format, his decision to cast newcomer Joe Alwyn in the lead role was a major mistake, and much of the film's staging left a lot to be desired.
The novel is not clunking around with the literary halo of high advances and M.F.A. pedigree and overthought adjectives, but it's a brutal story about loneliness in this hyperactive social media age that was bursting to be told.
There were times where I couldn't go hang with my family because I wanted to work out; times I pushed my body to its limits when I didn't have to; times when I overthought the game just a little too much.
Retrieved July 14, 2007. The band's guitarist Tom Dumont commented that Stewart's experience helped them keep the song simple because he "would have way overthought those chord changes."Edwards, Gavin. "No Doubt Make Party Music".
Some claimed the series discarded the true Superman, while others claimed that DC and Byrne did not understand the character of Superman. Others have given examples of why the new Superman was overthought and did not work as a character.
Though he expresses that he saw little need for Mickey and Jackie in this episode, he asserts that Donna had "the saddest end for a companion ever" and praises Davies for just managing to keep the plot together. He argues that as Davies "writes the emotions and big themes so well...blow logic and rational plot moments if they get in the way!" He compares Davies's writing style to "PT Barnum showmanship" and praises both the dark and light elements of the episode. He concludes that, if not overthought, the episode remains "an audacious, big, silly, often poignant season finale".
The B point system was discontinued on the "A". It is believed that the factory also employed mechanics to visit dealerships and disconnect the B points on any "M" (1975) models still in the showrooms. Suzuki toyed with the idea of two plugs like the Mazda's, but as with so much of their engineering on this bike, overthought the application, believing that they would require two plugs of different heat ranges. The idea was dropped, and the bike shipped with a single 18 mm conical seat gold palladium spark plug housed in a copper insert in the rotor housing (NGK A9EFV).
Jonathan Wroble of Slant Magazine gave it three stars out of five stars and called the album "a tidy, if derivative, antidote to today's overthought, overwrought pop". The Observer Kitty Empire rated the album three stars out of five and wrote; "Anyone in need of indulgent escapism will find plenty here. But you do wonder ... if more bling and circuses is what's required right now." In a negative review, Andy Gill from The Independent gave it two stars out of five, saying; "the final product is a much tamer beast, taking its lead more from Mars' position as frontman of Mark Ronson's "Uptown Funk" (2014)".
Once Addie was convinced to work on the album, he approached the issue aggressively. Chrisye's recent trilogy had been heavily inspired by art rock, which was a departure from the original romantic pop sound that Chrisye had had with the successful albums Badai Pasti Berlalu (The Storm will Surely Pass; 1977) and Sabda Alam (Fragile Nature; 1978); Addie insisted that the new album should harken back to those earlier albums. Together Chrisye and Addie planned the album in Addie's home in Tebet, South Jakarta; Addie later recalled that they both overthought the issues, as both were perfectionists. Addie also served as sound engineer with Irsan.
DIYs Alim Kheraj wrote that the song feels "overthought" and "calculated." In a negative review from The Line of Best Fit, Claire Biddles stated it feels "tacked on and unnecessary," while also suggesting it is the result of "a record label employee needing to tick the 'piano ballad' box." For The 405, Sean Ward compared it to a grandfather/daughter Britain's Got Talent audition, writing "nobody wants it and very few understand it." As it was released as single in Belgium and the Netherlands, "Homesick" reached number 2, 14 and 12 respectively on the Dutch Top 40, Dutch Single Top 100 and Ultratop 50 in the Flanders region of Belgium.
Spin said the album is "perhaps the strongest, most flavorful batch of tunes to reach an AI vet, and Lambert's polymorphous vocal skills unite dancefloor strut and hard-rock pomp in a convincing glam package". Rolling Stone, however, gave it a more mixed review: "The songs sound great but feel strangely stuffy—[it] seems like a disc that was overthought. Next time, the hugely talented Lambert should make sure he's going straight for the gut." Its Claude Kelly and Dr. Luke-produced lead single "For Your Entertainment" preceded the album's release but was not as successful as its second single "Whataya Want from Me" which impacted on charts worldwide, became his highest-peaking single (at number 10) on the Billboard Hot 100, and was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance at the 53rd awards ceremony.
Marks also reviewed O'Hara's play Antebellum in 2009, and felt that while the show had a "rich, imaginatively expressive intelligence," overall it was "overthought" and "garish." News Herald reporter Bob Abelman had a similar take on the show, which he found to be a "brilliant concept" but "by the end of the night is gone with the wind." In contrast, O'Hara's play Bootycandy received a wide variety of positive reviews. New York Times theatre critic Charles Isherwood named it a "Critic's Pick" at the time of its New York premiere, and described it to be "as raw in its language and raucous in spirit as it is smart and provocative." Isherwood also praised O'Hara's ability to alternate between moments of comedy and drama as he stated that "as funny as he can be when writing in ribald ′In Living Color′ sketch- comedy mode, Mr. O’Hara also reveals a more probing intelligence in the more serious scenes" of the play.
Wayne Koestenbaum writes: > Mary Jo Bang's remarkable elegies recall the late work of Ingeborg > Bachmann—a febrile, recursive lyricism. Like Nietzsche or Plath, Bang flouts > naysayers; luridly alive, she drives deep into aporia, her new, sad country. > Her stanzas, sometimes spilling, sometimes severe, perform an uncanny death- > song, recklessly extended—nearly to the breaking point. David Orr writes: > This is perhaps why Mary Jo Bang largely succeeds in her new book of elegies > for her son, called, simply enough, “Elegy.” Bang’s previous four > collections are polished and frequently interesting, but they also contain > more than their share of overwrought and overthought poetry about > poetry....That can’t be said of “Elegy.” This is a tightly focused, > completely forthright collection written almost entirely in the bleakest key > imaginable. The poems aren’t all great, some of them aren’t even good, but > collectively they are overwhelming — which is both a compliment to Bang’s > talent and to the toughness of mind that allowed her to attempt this > difficult project in the first place.

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