Exaggerate vs Provoke - What's the difference?
exaggerate | provoke | Related terms |
To overstate, to describe more than is fact.
to cause someone to become annoyed or angry.
* Bible, Eph. vi. 4
to bring about a reaction.
* J. Burroughs
*{{quote-news
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, title=International friendly: England 1-0 Spain
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(obsolete) To appeal.
Exaggerate is a related term of provoke.
As verbs the difference between exaggerate and provoke
is that exaggerate is to overstate, to describe more than is fact while provoke is to cause someone to become annoyed or angry.exaggerate
English
Verb
(exaggerat)- I've told you a billion times not to exaggerate !
- He said he'd slept with hundreds of girls, but I know he's exaggerating . The real number is about ten.
Synonyms
* overexaggerate * overstateAntonyms
* (overstate) downplay, understateDerived terms
* exaggeratedly * exaggeratingly * exaggerative * exaggeratively * exaggerativeness * exaggerator * exaggeratoryExternal links
* * * English transitive verbs ----provoke
English
Verb
(provok)- Don't provoke the dog; it may try to bite you.
- Ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath.
- To the poet the meaning is what he pleases to make it, what it provokes in his own soul.
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- (Dryden)