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overtrain
[oh-ver-treyn]
verb (used without object)
to exercise too hard or without sufficient recovery time, often causing injuries or a decline in performance.
When you overtrain with weights, you are constantly tearing down your muscles and not allowing your body to catch up in repairing them.
verb (used with object)
to exercise (a muscle or muscles) too hard or without sufficient recovery time, often causing injuries or a decline in performance.
Be careful not to overtrain individual muscle groupsārotating your workouts will help you avoid this.
to exercise or train (a person or animal) too much, too hard, or without sufficient recovery time.
Keep the sessions short so that you donāt overtrain or overtire your dog.
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Origin of overtrain1
Example Sentences
Much has changed since then, including new techniques that enabled AI researchers to make better use of the data they already have and sometimes āovertrainā on the same sources multiple times.
āLast year really bothered Cooper ā thatās just who he is,ā Rams general manager Les Snead said last month at the NFL ownersā annual meeting, adding that his only concern going into this season was that Kupp might overtrain.
āLissette has a whole calculation, because you canāt overtrain and you canāt undertrain,ā Norton said.
Robert Forster, a Santa Monica-based physical therapist who has worked with Kerseeās athletes since 1983, said Kersee understands the āwork-rest ratioā better than any coach, and does not overtrain where other coaches might double down on mileage.
I didnāt know you could overtrain.
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