Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
No matter what you do, your view of an oversharer is forever changed.
The Oversharer's breakfast cereal was amazing - see the before and after shot.
Geraldine, the chronic oversharer, doesn't have any problem listening in on her daughter's private thoughts.
I understand the mindset of the lifelong oversharer.
However, a word of warning: while owners may feel the urge to post numerous business-related pictures, there's nothing more off putting than an oversharer.
He nailed the role of the ultimate awkward dinner party guest as a recovering addict and compulsive oversharer named Paul.
The Oversharer will broadcast intimate episodes from your relationship to his mother, your mother, his blog readers and anyone else he can rope into paying attention.
Hard-rock enthusiast/chronic oversharer Adams crafts one of the most effortful yet inexplicably addictive songs in the recent history of metal.
OVERSHARER Wants you to share in every moment of their fabulous life.
The human incarnation of Twitter, in other words, is the person we all feel sorry for, the person we suspect might be a bit mentally ill, the tragic oversharer.
You can tweet him at twitter.com/abrahamlloyd. Diana Vilibert is Marie Claire's Web Editor, a chronic oversharer, closet romantic, and blind-date addict.
The OverSharer: The current Overshare Poster Boy is Phillip Nobel, who wrote a highly hide-chapping account of his extramarital affair for Elle.
By doing so, I became what Phoebe Maltz Bovy, a blogger for The Atlantic, calls a "parental oversharer," a writer "mining [her] children's lives for material."
A son of Ai Qing, a beloved revolutionary poet whose words Premier Wen Jiabao can quote from memory, Ai Weiwei is a burly online oversharer with 78,000 followers on Twitter.
There is the Control Freak, the Been There Done That (BTDT), the Do Not Disturb, Juggler, Superfan, Oversharer, Outsourcer and Late Arrival, according to Sony.
Launched last year, it allows people to subscribe to—or follow—each other's "tumblelogs" and netted a bit of microfame for the odd vapid oversharer and facilitated the expression of at least one Garfield fan's flash of inspired genius.
I described how Lucy lined up her dolls and plucked out her eyebrows, as well as the thought process behind her behavior: "If I don't do this, something bad will happen" - textbook symptoms shared by many children with O.C.D. Does recounting them make me an "oversharer" of "private" material?