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Overcome

Overcome is a verb that denotes succeeding in dealing with or defeating something that hinders progress, such as a problem, obstacle, or opponent. It can also describe being overwhelmed by a force or emotion, usually in a passive construction: “She was overcome by grief.” The principal forms are overcome (base form and past participle), overcame (simple past), and overcoming (present participle).

Etymology: The word traces to Old English and Germanic roots combining over- and come, originally meaning “to

Usage and nuance: Common collocations include overcome an obstacle, overcome difficulties, overcome fear, overcome addiction, overcome

come
over”
or
“to
pass
beyond”
and
by
the
Middle
English
period
acquiring
the
sense
“to
prevail
over”
or
“to
conquer.”
illness,
and
overcome
adversity.
“Overcome
with”
expresses
strong
emotion,
as
in
“overcome
with
joy.”
The
term
is
often
contrasted
with
get
over,
which
more
typically
denotes
recovery
or
acceptance
rather
than
active
conquest.
In
passive
constructions,
overcome
can
describe
a
person
or
thing
overwhelmed
by
something:
“The
hikers
were
overcome
by
heat
and
exhaustion.”
Synonyms
include
conquer,
surmount,
prevail
over,
defeat,
and
weather.
In
everyday
language,
overcome
also
appears
in
the
noun
form
overcoming
as
in
“Overcoming
adversity”
or
“the
overcoming
of
obstacles.”