Definify.com
Definition 2024
over_the_top
over the top
See also: over-the-top
English
Alternative forms
Adjective
over the top (comparative more over the top, superlative most over the top)
- (idiomatic) Bold; beyond normal, expected, or reasonable limits; excessive; outrageous.
- He has always had an independent style, but don't you think purple spiky hair is a bit over the top?
- 2015 February 23, “Oscars 2015: 10 things we learned”, in The Guardian (London):
- You might have expected a pop star known for shows in which she has someone vomit paint on to the stage to come up with something similarly over the top for a live rendition of The Sound of Music. But Gaga chose to take the traditional route.
- 2007, Bruce Jenkins, "The Chronicle Sports Columnist Blog," San Francisco Chronicle, 26 Aug,
- Myers went over the top in the clubhouse, berating a reporter who questioned Myers' terminology.
- (communications) Delivered across the Internet to a television or similar device.
Usage notes
- Over the top occurs only following a copula as the object of a sentence, as above, whereas
- Over-the-top is used where the adjective occurs before the word it modifies, as
- He gave an over-the-top performance.
Synonyms
- (bold, excessive, outrageous): exaggerated, OTT, too much
Translations
beyond normal, expected, or reasonable limits; excessive; exaggerated
Adverb
over the top (comparative more over the top, superlative most over the top)
- (from World War One) Over the parapet of a trench, especially at the start of a futile attack.
- The men were sent over the top to their certain death.
- Used other than as an idiom: see over, the, top.
References
- "over the top" in the Dictionary.com Unabridged, v1.0.1, Lexico Publishing Group, 2006.
- Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., 1989.