- overstep the mark
- to do or say something that makes people angry because it breaks a rule or is not acceptable
She overstepped the mark when she asked him about his mother.
English dictionary. 2014.
She overstepped the mark when she asked him about his mother.
English dictionary. 2014.
overstep the mark — phrase to do or say something that makes people angry because it breaks a rule or is not acceptable She overstepped the mark when she asked him about his mother. Thesaurus: to fail to obey a rule, law or commandsynonym obedience and… … Useful english dictionary
overstep the mark — ► overstep the mark go beyond what is intended or acceptable. Main Entry: ↑overstep … English terms dictionary
overstep the mark — If you overstep the mark, you go too far and upset someone by saying something or behaving in a way that is unacceptable. Jenny is angry with her son. He overstepped the mark when he called his grandfather an old fool … English Idioms & idiomatic expressions
overstep the mark — to upset someone by doing or saying more than you should. You overstepped the mark when you shouted at your mother … New idioms dictionary
overstep the mark — Exceed the accepted limits … A concise dictionary of English slang
overstep the line — overstep the ˈmark/ˈline idiom to behave in a way that people think is not acceptable • She realized she had overstepped the mark and quickly apologized. Main entry: ↑overstepidiom … Useful english dictionary
overstep (or overshoot) the mark — go beyond what is acceptable. → overstep … English new terms dictionary
overshoot or overstep the mark — idi to go beyond what is fitting or suitable … From formal English to slang
overstep — ► VERB (overstepped, overstepping) ▪ go beyond (a set or accepted limit). ● overstep the mark Cf. ↑overstep the mark … English terms dictionary
mark — mark1 W2S3 [ma:k US ma:rk] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(dirt)¦ 2¦(damaged area)¦ 3¦(coloured area)¦ 4¦(writing)¦ 5¦(level/number)¦ 6¦(student s work)¦ 7 full/top marks for effort/trying/persistence etc 8 high/low mark 9 make/leave your … Dictionary of contemporary English