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Anonymous Posted 20 years ago
Linguistics Studies

Help me out please-only takes a second...

0Hi everybody,02br
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00I am working on a title for a program for one of my customers. The customer suggested 'Goes Overboard' as a suitable title for this program. The program is one of change within the company, so the customer defines it as going to extremes in every possible, positive sense. Can someone tell me what connotations this title has and what would be a different, more suitable, title?02br
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00Many thanks in advance!02br
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00Carolijn0-
  

Top answer

1i 00To go overboard = to go to extremes, especially as a result of enthusiasm02i 00. 02br 02br 00Beyond that, the third person singular 01b 01i 00goes 02i 02b 00sounds a little odd-- though I don't know what kind of program you are speaking of. 0-

  • 1i 00To go overboard = to go to extremes, especially as a result of enthusiasm02i 00.
  • 02br 02br 00Beyond that, the third person singular 01b 01i 00goes 02i 02b 00sounds a little odd-- though I don't know what kind of program you are speaking of.
  • 0-
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1 Answers
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1i00To go overboard = to go to extremes, especially as a result of enthusiasm02i00. This is according to the dictionary, but it can have a negative connotation, in that 01i00going overboard 02i00is often being 01u00too02u00 extreme for others.02br
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00Beyond that, the third person singular 01b01i

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