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Showing results for hyperactive. Search instead for hyperaesthes.
Definitions

hyperactive

[hahy-per-ak-tiv] / ˌhaɪ pərˈæk tɪv /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

He’s in preschool and doing well, but sometimes he gets agitated and hyperactive at night.

From Los Angeles Times

They range from a hyperactive toddler using the tray table for an extended drum solo to a deranged passenger brandishing weaponized silverware.

From Seattle Times

The music — brainy, hyperactive, overloaded, bitterly absurd — is a ferocious counterattack.

From New York Times

Then internet shopping went hyperactive, with our online buying climbing by at least 50 percent in the first months after the virus started spreading in the U.S., according to recently revised government figures.

From New York Times

How could you not, with six-plus feet of manic, hyperactive flesh snug in his elf garb, the definition of exuberance, a sugar high fueled by jelly beans coated in maple syrup?

From Washington Post