C1 verb Formel

overprivy

/ˌoʊvərˈprɪvi/

To grant excessive or inappropriate access to private or confidential information, or to become over-involved in matters that should remain secret. It implies a breach of professional or personal boundaries by sharing more than is necessary or prudent.

Exemples

3 sur 5
1

I didn't mean to overprivy him to our family drama, but it just slipped out during dinner.

I did not intend to give him too much access to our family's private conflicts, but I accidentally revealed it during dinner.

2

The committee must ensure they do not overprivy external consultants to the board's internal deliberations.

The committee needs to make sure they do not allow outside consultants to know too much about the board's private discussions.

3

Don't overprivy her to your personal life; she isn't as trustworthy as she seems.

Do not share too many of your private details with her because she might not be reliable.

Famille de mots

Nom
overpriviness
Verb
overprivy
Adverbe
overprivily
Adjectif
overprivy
Apparenté
privacy
💡

Astuce mémo

Visualize an old-fashioned 'privy' (toilet) that is 'over'flowing; it represents private things coming out in an excessive, messy way.

Quiz rapide

The manager was warned not to ___ the new intern to the highly sensitive merger documents.

Correct !

La bonne réponse est : overprivy

Exemples

1

I didn't mean to overprivy him to our family drama, but it just slipped out during dinner.

everyday

I did not intend to give him too much access to our family's private conflicts, but I accidentally revealed it during dinner.

2

The committee must ensure they do not overprivy external consultants to the board's internal deliberations.

formal

The committee needs to make sure they do not allow outside consultants to know too much about the board's private discussions.

3

Don't overprivy her to your personal life; she isn't as trustworthy as she seems.

informal

Do not share too many of your private details with her because she might not be reliable.

4

The study examines the psychological effects when parents overprivy their children to adult stressors.

academic

The research looks at the mental impact of allowing children to be excessively aware of the stresses experienced by adults.

5

It is a significant security risk to overprivy temporary staff to high-level strategic data.

business

Giving temporary employees too much access to important strategic information is a major security concern.

Famille de mots

Nom
overpriviness
Verb
overprivy
Adverbe
overprivily
Adjectif
overprivy
Apparenté
privacy

Collocations courantes

overprivy a colleague to give a coworker too much private information
overprivy to details to make someone excessively aware of specific details
overprivy sensitive information to disclose too much confidential data
tendency to overprivy a habit of sharing too many secrets
risk of overprivying the danger of allowing too much access to secrets

Phrases Courantes

to overprivy one's hand

to reveal too much of one's secret plans or intentions

overprivy to the inner workings

excessively knowledgeable about how a secret system operates

dangerously overprivy

having an unsafe amount of private knowledge

Souvent confondu avec

overprivy vs privy

Privy means simply being informed of a secret, whereas overprivy implies the access is excessive or inappropriate.

overprivy vs overprovide

Overprovide refers to giving too many resources or goods, while overprivy refers specifically to information and secrets.

📝

Notes d'usage

This is a rare, formal verb often used in academic or literary contexts to describe a failure to maintain boundaries. It is more sophisticated than 'overshare' and usually implies that the person receiving the information shouldn't have it.

⚠️

Erreurs courantes

Learners often use 'overprivy' as an adjective (e.g., 'he is overprivy') when they should use it as a verb, or they use it interchangeably with 'overshare' in casual speech where 'overshare' would be more natural.

💡

Astuce mémo

Visualize an old-fashioned 'privy' (toilet) that is 'over'flowing; it represents private things coming out in an excessive, messy way.

📖

Origine du mot

Derived from the prefix 'over-' (excessive) and the Middle English 'privy' (from Old French 'privé'), meaning secret or private.

Modèles grammaticaux

Transitive verb: requires an object (to overprivy someone). Often followed by the preposition 'to' (to overprivy someone to something). Conjugates as a regular verb: overprivies, overprivying, overprivied.
🌍

Contexte culturel

Commonly used in discussions regarding digital ethics and the 'right to be forgotten,' where systems might overprivy the public to an individual's past.

Quiz rapide

The manager was warned not to ___ the new intern to the highly sensitive merger documents.

Correct !

La bonne réponse est : overprivy

Mots lis

to

A1

Used to indicate the place, person, or thing that someone or something moves toward. It can also mark the recipient of an action or the limit of a range.

and

A1

A primary conjunction used to connect words, phrases, or clauses that are grammatically equal. It indicates addition, a sequence of events, or a relationship between two things.

a

A1

A word used before a singular noun that is not specific or is being mentioned for the first time. It is used only before words that begin with a consonant sound to indicate one of something.

that

A1

This word is a demonstrative pronoun used to indicate a specific person, object, or idea that is further away in space or time from the speaker. It is also used to refer back to something that has already been mentioned or to introduce a clause that identifies something.

I

A1

The pronoun 'I' is used by a speaker or writer to refer to themselves as the subject of a verb. It is the first-person singular subject pronoun in English and is always capitalized regardless of its position in a sentence.

for

A1

Used to show who is intended to have or use something, or to explain the purpose or reason for an action. It is also frequently used to indicate a specific duration of time.

not

A1

A function word used to express negation or denial. It is primarily used to make a sentence or phrase negative, often following an auxiliary verb or the verb 'to be'.

with

A1

A preposition used to indicate that people or things are together, in the same place, or performing an action together. It can also describe the instrument used to perform an action or a characteristic that someone or something has.

he

A1

A pronoun used to refer to a male person or animal that has already been mentioned or is easily identified. It functions as the subject of a sentence.

you

A1

Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.

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