different between oversend vs overhend
oversend
English
Etymology
From Middle English oversenden (“to send over, transmit”), from Old English ofersendan (“to transmit”), from Proto-Germanic *uber (“over”) + *sandijan? (“to send”), corresponding to over- +? send. Cognate with Middle Dutch oversenden (“to send over”), German übersenden (“to send, transmit”).
Verb
oversend (third-person singular simple present oversends, present participle oversending, simple past and past participle oversent)
- To send an amount greater than what is required; to oversupply.
- (transitive, intransitive) To send (a message, etc.) to too many people.
- 2010, Harriet Diamond, Linda Eve Diamond, Perfect Phrases for Writing Company Announcements
- Don't oversend. That means don't send an e-mail announcement to everyone who may have once sent you an e-mail; it also means don't overburden those who are willingly on your e-mail list because they want relevant information. Oversending e-mails is the surest way to be ignored or find your way to the junk mail file.
- 2010, Harriet Diamond, Linda Eve Diamond, Perfect Phrases for Writing Company Announcements
- To send over, transmit.
Derived terms
- oversending
Noun
oversend (plural oversends)
- A transmission that is larger than it should be.
oversend From the web:
overhend
English
Etymology
From over- +? hend (“to seize, grasp”).
Verb
overhend (third-person singular simple present overhends, present participle overhending, simple past and past participle overhent)
- (transitive, obsolete) To overtake.
overhend From the web:
- what is overhemd in engels
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