overestimate

overestimate
əuvər'estimeit
verb
(to estimate, judge etc (something) to be greater, larger or more important than it is: He overestimates his own ability.) sobreestimar
overestimate
tr[əʊvər'estɪmeɪt]
transitive verb
1 sobreestimar
noun
1 sobreestimación nombre femenino
overestimate [.o:vər'ɛstə.meɪt] vt, -mated ; -mating : sobreestimar
overestimate
v.
evaluar con exageración v.
sobrestimar v.
'əʊvər'estəmeɪt, ˌəʊvər'estɪmeɪt
transitive verb \<\<cost/strength\>\> sobreestimar; \<\<importance\>\> exagerar
1.
[ˌǝʊvǝr'estɪmɪt]
N sobreestimación f , estimación f excesiva; (Econ) presupuesto m excesivo
2.
[ˌǝʊvǝr'estɪmeɪt]
VT [+ importance, value, cost, person] sobreestimar

to overestimate one's strength/ability — creerse uno más fuerte/capaz de lo que es

* * *
['əʊvər'estəmeɪt, ˌəʊvər'estɪmeɪt]
transitive verb \<\<cost/strength\>\> sobreestimar; \<\<importance\>\> exagerar

English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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Mira otros diccionarios:

  • overestimate — o‧ver‧es‧ti‧mate [ˌəʊvərˈestmeɪt ǁ ˌoʊ ] verb [transitive] to think that something is larger or greater than it really is: • Forecasters had underestimated growth and overestimated inflation by about 0.5% a year. overestimate [ ˈestmt] noun… …   Financial and business terms

  • Overestimate — O ver*es ti*mate, n. An estimate that is too high; as, an overestimate of the vote. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • overestimate — overestimate, underestimate Because these words are often used in negative or quasi negative contexts, there is a danger of losing track of logic and using the wrong word, usually underestimate for overestimate. In a wallchart on the plays of… …   Modern English usage

  • Overestimate — O ver*es ti*mate, v. t. 1. To estimate too highly. [1913 Webster] 2. Hence: To overvalue. [PJC] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • overestimate — I verb adulate, aggrandize, attach too much importance to, enlarge, estimate too highly, exaggerate, exalt, exceed, expand, extol, flatter, glorify, inflate, magnify, make too much of, maximize, misestimate, misjudge, misrepresent, overassess,… …   Law dictionary

  • overestimate — ► VERB ▪ form too high an estimate of. ► NOUN ▪ an excessively high estimate. DERIVATIVES overestimation noun …   English terms dictionary

  • overestimate — [ō΄vər es′tə māt΄; ] for n. [ ō′vər es΄tə mit] vt. overestimated, overestimating to set too high an estimate on or for n. an estimate that is too high overestimation n …   English World dictionary

  • overestimate — overestimates, overestimating, overestimated (The verb is pronounced [[t]o͟ʊvəre̱stɪmeɪt[/t]]. The noun is pronounced [[t]o͟ʊvəre̱stɪmət[/t]].) 1) VERB If you say that someone overestimates something, you mean that they think it is greater in… …   English dictionary

  • overestimate — I UK [ˌəʊvərˈestɪˌmeɪt] / US [ˌoʊvərˈestɪˌmeɪt] verb [transitive] Word forms overestimate : present tense I/you/we/they overestimate he/she/it overestimates present participle overestimating past tense overestimated past participle overestimated… …   English dictionary

  • overestimate — verb ADVERB ▪ considerably, greatly, grossly, seriously, vastly ▪ consistently ▪ The department consistently overestimated its budget deficits …   Collocations dictionary

  • overestimate — o|ver|es|ti|mate1 [ˌəuvərˈestımeıt US ˌou ] v [T] 1.) to think something is better, more important etc than it really is ≠ ↑underestimate ▪ He tends to overestimate his own abilities. ▪ The importance of training in health and safety cannot be… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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