0 to make someone or something work too hard or carry, contain, or deal with too much -- 使不堪重负;使负担过重;使装载过多
Indeed, in an area of popular music studies overburdened with authorial interpretations, it is entirely refreshing to hear the accounts of young people themselves.
The isopleths are not disrupted or truncated by thrusting, as previously suspected, indicating that the heating is not attributable to pre-thrusting stratigraphic overburden.
Since there is no central verifying authority involved, there is no concern for overburdening the system as it grows.
Despite the hierarchically institutionalized local finance and the illegal practice of overburdening, the manipulation of such incentives served as a way of motivating local authorities.
But it need not overburden a society through high technology interventions.
The most serious concern is the delay caused by a seriously overburdened and understaffed judicial system.
Journalists and scholars became quite vocal about the financial crises in local governments, and this problem of overburdening became one of their favorite targets.
An economic evaluation may overburden a study with detailed data collection, data collection must be designed efficiently.