We have no meanings for "much exaggeration" in our records yet.
1 There is often much exaggeration , much unfairness, much acrimony in their debates.
2 How much exaggeration , we hear you ask… A whole fourteen minutes to be exact.
3 There is much exaggeration in second-rate books about tropical vegetation.
4 Carlyle and Ruskin indulge in much exaggeration , relying on striking statements for increased effect.
5 There is much exaggeration and rattle-brain about this fellow.
6 Of its wealth and commercial importance in the abstract, I should say much exaggeration has been indulged in.
7 On that day the city of Dresden without much exaggeration might have been compared to a great dining-hall.
8 Gale stood fascinated, unable to tell how much he saw was real, how much exaggeration of overwrought emotions.
9 Although friends and colleagues, there is a palpable tension between the pair, who are playing themselves without much exaggeration .
10 He is described by Chaucer with so much humour, that one can hardly suspect much exaggeration in the sketch.
11 The Madani, who, as usual with Orientals, take a personal pride in their castle, speak of it with much exaggeration .
12 We well know how much sophistry there was in the reasonings, and how much exaggeration in the declamations of both parties.
13 Without much exaggeration , the same might be said of the people of this country during the earlier part of this century.
14 One may, without much exaggeration , say that the history of this country is written in gigantic characters of mountains and islands.
15 Some people still living can remember the time when they could have repeated, without much exaggeration , the confession of Peter's Procurator-General.
16 The whole Furlo Pass might, without too much exaggeration , be described as a kind of Cheddar on the scale of the Via Mala.
Other examples for "much exaggeration"
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This collocation consists of: Much exaggeration through the time
Much exaggeration across language varieties