English language

How to pronounce overproduce in English?

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Type Words
Type of make, create, produce
Derivation overproduction


The country overproduces cars.
Type Words
Type of produce, raise, farm, grow
Derivation overproduction

Examples of overproduce

overproduce
The vitamin aids cell division, and some tumors overproduce folate as they grow.
From the bloomberg.com
People whose tumors didn't overproduce the protein received no benefit, however.
From the usatoday.com
The E. coli microorganism can be modified to make it overproduce fatty acids.
From the sciencedaily.com
Doctors think that chemicals in coffee cause the stomach to overproduce acid.
From the sciencedaily.com
Having extra copies of a gene can cause cells to overproduce the protein it encodes.
From the sciencedaily.com
Sometimes they overproduce, like a kid working extra hard to get a clunky kite aloft.
From the post-gazette.com
I feel like there are so many opportunities to layer and overproduce songs.
From the kentucky.com
As a result, mutated cells overproduce telomerase and hence become virtually immortal.
From the sciencedaily.com
People have been trying to make them overproduce the oil and store it.
From the newscientist.com
More examples
  • Produce in excess; produce more than needed or wanted
  • (overproduction) too much production or more than expected
  • (Overproduces) In economics, overproduction, oversupply or excess of supply refers to excess of supply over demand of products being offered to the market. This leads to lower prices and/or unsold goods.
  • (Overproduction (music)) In music journalism, the term overproduction refers to music that allegedly uses excessive amounts of audio effects, layering, or digital manipulation.
  • To produce more of something than one can use or sell; To apply excess modifications to musical recordings, such as adding effects
  • (Overproducing) Providing more product, work, time and /or serving than necessary to serve your customer.
  • (Overproduction) Producing more, sooner or faster than is required by the next process.
  • (Over-Production) where too much food is produced as a result of EU policies to ensure that Europe is self- sufficient in food; this results in very expensive storage. (See CAP, Grain Mountains, Milk Lakes, Surplus, Set-aside, Diversification, Quotas, Guaranteed Prices, Subsidies, Intervention).
  • (Overproduction) Printing paperwork (that might change) before it is needed. Processing an