overquick
English
editEtymology
editAdjective
editoverquick (not comparable)
- Too quick; overly quick.
- 1885, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Idylls of the King[1]:
- And Merlin answered, 'Overquick art thou / To catch a loathly plume fallen from the wing / Of that foul bird of rapine whose whole prey / Is man's good name: he never wronged his bride.
- 1899, Anthony Hope, The King's Mirror:
- Then I slipped away and paid marked and honorific courtesy to Bederhof's wife and Bederhof's daughters, tall girls, not over-quick to be married, somehow quite inevitable if one considered Bederhof himself.
- 1900, Thomas Gray, William Mason, Duncan Crookes Tovey, Norton Nicholls, The Letters of Thomas Gray, Including the Correspondence of Gray and Mason[2], G. Bell and Sons, page 166:
- It is really, as Johnson himself saw, an elliptical expression, and was due to an overquick wit, the sire of many an Irish bull.