0 to explain something more than necessary: --
There's no need to belabor the point.
1 to hit someone or something hard and repeatedly: --
2 to criticize someone --
3 to explain something more than necessary: --
I don’t want to belabor the point, but I still don’t think you understand.
We need not belabor the grave danger inherent in the contest broadcast by defendant.
Proving that political leaders (especially in a patrimonial regime) rst and foremost serve their interests, even at the expense of their developmental goals, is perhaps belaboring the obvious.
Perhaps the number of times this phrase is repeated speaks to the fact that the text needs to belabor a message that is resisted by itself.
They have to be exposed, criticized, belabored, used up.
To belabor the point, if "agental prevention" exists this is simply the special case of the singleton set.