Overstate in a sentence as a verb

I cannot overstate how much power naps have improved my life.

I don't think i can possibly overstate how much i've grown and learned in the past two months.

They will make sure that there is no overstate, understate, secrets, or head scratching.

It is very difficult to overstate the extent to which "government people" live in a bubble.

I'm quite happy to believe it's safer than other modes of transport, but I wouldn't be too quick to overstate it.

If you're not a designer, it might be hard to see, but the importance of this work is impossible to overstate.

Although this obfuscation is very clever, I think the article overstates a bit.

Most of the time the reporters overstate the research, the scientists keep the data secret, and the general public is left scratching their heads.

NewsBlur is mentioned in the article, but I cannot overstate how positive my experience with DigitalOcean has been.

It's difficult to overstate just how much simpler it makes writing highly-concurrent server-type programs.

Often companies I've worked for have, too – sales people are very happy to overstate the available features and capabilities of any product.

If you read up on the history of the era and combine that with a study of the real effects of nuclear bombs, it becomes evident that there was an uncoordinated, but nevertheless systematic, effort to grossly overstate the dangers of nuclear war.

Both blog posts overstate the impact of the Minnesota notice to higher education institutions, which has resulted only in a fig-leaf change to Coursera's ToS directed to Minnesota residents, and has had NO effect on Coursera's operation in Minnesota.

Overstate definitions

verb

to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth; "tended to romanticize and exaggerate this `gracious Old South' imagery"

See also: exaggerate overdraw hyperbolize hyperbolise magnify amplify