0 present participle of exaggerate --
1 to make something seem larger, more important, better, or worse than it really is: --
For clarity the radial scale is 10 x the axial scale, thereby grossly exaggerating the actual core displacement.
In the impaired model, the overall strength of the phonological representations was weakened, exaggerating the disadvantage of word final stops and fricatives.
I'm exaggerating word-wise, but not with my feelings.
In addition, exaggerating the ver tical component offered image information that was difficult to extract otherwise.
We believe that this objection amounts to both underestimating a priori the power of associative mechanisms and exaggerating the actual accuracy of people-performance.
Read through a book slowly, exaggerating the rhyming words.
Seditious words cases cannot all be regarded as drunken indiscretions or developments of private feuds, with witnesses exaggerating or fabricating evidence.
Making this claim frequently involves exaggerating the traits of the commercially dominant form.