overwound
English
Etymology
over- + wound
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -aʊnd
Verb
overwound
- simple past tense and past participle of overwind
Adjective
overwound (comparative more overwound, superlative most overwound)
- (figuratively, uncommon) Nervous, tense, jumpy.
- 1949, Irwin Shaw, The Young Lions:
- Everyone else Christian had had anything to do with, ever since the bad night outside Alexandria, had seemed to be overwound, jumpy, bitter, hysterical, overtired...
- 1957, Richard Hoggart, The Uses Of Literacy:
- He has left his class, at least in spirit, by being in certain ways unusual; and he is still unusual in another class, too tense and overwound.
- 2004, Emma Holly, Strange Attractions, →ISBN, page 23:
- Eric's boss had accused him more than once of being a worrier, but Eric hadn't felt this overwound since his previous employer's stock underwent a dot-bomb implosion.
- 2004 October 6, Sidney Blumenthal, “The master of Washington vs. the fox”, in Salon.com, archived from the original on 7 March 2008, retrieved 14 September 2009:
- He [Cheney] could only exist with a chief executive self-absorbed in his resentments, narrow in experience and intellectual scope, and who does not hold his vice president accountable; an incompetent national security advisor, overwound in her eagerness to please; and a secretary of state who never presses his advantages but accepts his internal defeats, playing the good soldier.
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