overhanded
See also: over-handed
English
Alternative forms
Adjective
overhanded (not comparable)
- Overhand
- 1998, Richard Bak, A Place for Summer: A Narrative History of Tiger Stadium, →ISBN, page 31:
- That summer overhanded pitching was legalized, resulting in a slew of no-hitters, including the only ones ever pitched at Recreation Park.
- 1963, Gertrude Jean Shaw, The Violoncello Sonata Literature in France During the Eighteenth Century, page 19:
- As has been mentioned earlier, there are various ways to hold a bow, the most obvious difference being between the overhanded method and the underhanded method.
- 2013, William Brady, The Kedge Anchor; or, Young Sailors' Assistant, →ISBN, page 22:
- To make an overhanded knot, you pass the end of the rope over the standing part and through the bight.
- 1927, The New Butterick Dressmaker, page 291:
- An overhanded patch is used on material that is seldom washed, and where the raw edge on the wrong side is not objectionable.
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- Overstaffed
- 1867, John Watts, The Catechism of Wages and Capital, page 22:
- If these proposed alterations were made, would not the best trades soon be overhanded?
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Adverb
overhanded (not comparable)
- Overhand
- 2013, Kacy Carter, Set to Serve, →ISBN:
- As you get older though, you will definitely want to be able to serve overhanded.
- 1902, William Wallace Chrisite, Chimney Design and Theory: A Book for Engineers and Architects:
- The chimney was built entirely from the inside platforms, the masons working overhanded, and thus no staging was necessary on the outside.
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