Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
She was an exaggerator, just like those people at the café.
Such an exaggerator, I thought with a smile.
He is not a simulator or an exaggerator.
"My twin was a great exaggerator of effects.
He was a serial exaggerator.
Not an exaggerator.
Well, President Clinton is the Great Exaggerator.
An exaggerator of considerable reputation."
He's a global warming exaggerator."
The character of the Baron Munchausen is known to all as the greatest exaggerator of all times.
The state schools superintendent, Jack O'Connell, a serial exaggerator, insists that it would eviscerate school financing.
His own personal opinion, based on some historical study, was that Captain James T. Kirk was a bit of an exaggerator.
The inescapable conclusion is that Mr. Gore, no amateur exaggerator, grossly exaggerates his party's independence of special interests.
First of all, Gore was the exaggerator, Kerry is the flip-flopper, and Clinton was the waffler - get your facts, straight, man!
Klag had been rescued by Captain Ganok of the Rokronos, and the general knew him to be an inveterate exaggerator.
Similarly, the noun "bragger" may be derived from the Gaelic word bréagóir, a liar, wheedler, deceiver or exaggerator.
There is an exaggerator of emotion and a pain shut-off so that the patient weeps over anything but wriggles and twists when asked to approach pain.
"Sinister Exaggerator" is covered by Primus on their 1992 EP Miscellaneous Debris.
Although an eyewitness, there is general agreement among historians that Abbo's numbers are "a gross exaggeration," with Abbo being "in a class of his own as an exaggerator."
And again Mr. Clinton kept his tongue when Mr. Dole smilingly compared him to "the great exaggerator," the former Senator's dead brother, Kenny.
And it seems to me that Dr. Hansen, whose predictions about global warming have proved remarkably accurate, didn't believe that he could successfully be portrayed as an unreliable exaggerator.
Others, through associates or lawyers, said Mr. Richard was little more than a wild exaggerator and a serial manipulator who drew attention to the Luccheses through a foolishly flamboyant style.
Dole : And so it seems that we can talk about what we call Kenny the great exaggerator because he just liked to exag-- Clinton : I think my ideas are better.
His father, Senator Albert Gore, was himself considered a standout exaggerator in his day, even by Mr. Gore and his mother, both of whom have been quoted to that effect.
This is why the image of Vice President Al Gore as a "phony exaggerator" took root in many voters' minds, while concerns about Mr. Bush's relative lack of experience did not.