overdirect
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]overdirect (third-person singular simple present overdirects, present participle overdirecting, simple past and past participle overdirected)
- (transitive) To take an excessive, overbearing role in directing (a play or film).
- To provide too much direction, to be too controlling.
- 1946, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations, Cancer Research:
- They should neither overdirect nor underdirect the program.
- 1982, Susan Dellinger, Communicating Effectively: A Complete Guide for Better Management, →ISBN:
- When a meeting is either overdirected (Example A) or underdirected (Example B), you're in trouble.