overworked
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -ɜː(ɹ)kt
Adjective
overworked (comparative more overworked, superlative most overworked)
- Subjected to too much work.
- Overworked and underpaid? Then quit your job and become a pro darts player.
- 2013 October 19, “Preparing for success”, in The Economist, volume 409, number 8858:
- Miss Suu Kyi’s overworked advisers […] argue that people have to be realistic about what can be achieved in a short time and on a slender budget.
- 2020, Sophie Lewis, “Collective Turn-off”, in Mal[1]:
- The truth is that we are too overworked, under capitalism, to be deeply, collectively horny, too overworked even to realise that this is the case.
- (figurative, of a word, phrase, etc.) Having been overused such that it has lost its meaning; trite; banal.
- 2015 January 18, Mariella Frostrup, “I don’t know how to move on from my first boyfriend”, in The Guardian[3], →ISSN:
- Dare I say “Let it go” without images of an animated princess flashing before your eyes? If it was an overworked phrase before Frozen, it’s now hard to use the expression without a shudder.
Translations
subjected to too much work
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See also
Verb
overworked
- simple past and past participle of overwork