overcompensate

  • 61spatial disorientation — Inability to determine one s true body position, motion, and altitude (or, in water, depth) relative to the Earth or one s surroundings. It may result from a brain or nerve disorder or from limitations in the normal sensory apparatus. Most clues… …

    Universalium

  • 62overcompensatory — adjective Tending to overcompensate; providing excessive compensation …

    Wiktionary

  • 63overcompensation — noun a) An excess amount provided in one area in an effort to overcome a perceived lack in another area. b) Excessive pay or reward provided for work performed. See Also: overcompensate, overcompensatory …

    Wiktionary

  • 64Composite fermion — For other uses, see Fermions#Composite fermions. A composite fermion is the bound state of an electron and an even number of quantized vortices, sometimes visually pictured as the bound state of an electron and, attached, an even number of… …

    Wikipedia

  • 65Cultural depictions of Napoleon — Napoleon is often represented in his green colonel uniform of the Chasseur à Cheval, with a large bicorne and a hand in waistcoat gesture. Statue in Les Invalides …

    Wikipedia

  • 66John Graham, 1st Viscount Dundee — Born 21 July 1648(1648 07 21) Glen Ogilvie, near Glamis, Angus Died 27 July 1689 …

    Wikipedia

  • 67Lord Byron — For other holders of the title, see Baron Byron. For other uses, see Byron (disambiguation), Lord Byron (disambiguation) and George Byron (disambiguation). The Right Honourable The Lord Byron FRS Portrait of Lord Byron by Thomas Phillips …

    Wikipedia

  • 68multiplier — 1. a number applied by multiplication to a multiplicand to produce a figure for damages in cases of future loss, which will provide an appropriate annuity equivalent to the loss but which will itself be exhausted at the time of the notional death …

    Law dictionary

  • 69overpay — (Roget s IV) v. Syn. pay too much, pay excessively, overcompensate, overrecompense, over reward, over remunerate, overreimburse, overyield, overexceed, oversettle, pay the Devil*. Ant. deceive*, deprive, cheat …

    English dictionary for students

  • 70overcompensation — See: overcompensate …

    English dictionary