0 relating to a way of speaking or writing that makes someone or something sound bigger, better, more, etc., than they are:
1 involving a curve whose ends continue to move apart from each other:
The spacecraft are all travelling in unusual hyperbolic curves.
Comets don't have regular orbits; they can come in in a hyperbolic orbit.
The film was a hyperbolic and exuberant drama-documentary of gangster rituals, amorality, and violence.
Don't use hyperbolic marketing language to describe your novel to a publisher.
The hyperbolic New York City developer was in Chicago to go over the design of a proposed residential tower.
The hyperbolic plane has been described as a surface where space curves away from itself at each point and expands.
The selected mathematical example here is a hyperbolic graph.
The painting will be displayed in its original hyperbolic shape.