Overload - meaning and definition. What is Overload
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What (who) is Overload - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Overload (disambiguation); Overload (Album); Overload (album); Overload (band); Overload (song); Over load; Over-load

Overload         
·vt To load or fill to excess; to load too heavily.
II. Overload ·noun An excessive load; the excess beyond a proper load.
overload         
(overloaded)
1.
If you overload something such as a vehicle, you put more things or people into it than it was designed to carry.
Don't overload the boat or it will sink...
Large meals overload the digestive system.
VERB: V n, V n
overloaded
Some trains were so overloaded that their suspension collapsed.
ADJ
2.
To overload someone with work, problems, or information means to give them more work, problems, or information than they can cope with.
...an effective method that will not overload staff with yet more paperwork.
VERB: V n with n
Overload is also a noun.
57 per cent complained of work overload...
The greatest danger is that we simply create information overload for our executives.
N-UNCOUNT: usu supp N
overloaded
The bar waiter was already overloaded with orders.
ADJ
3.
If you overload an electrical system, you cause too much electricity to flow through it, and so damage it.
Never overload an electrical socket.
VERB: V n
Overload         
In an electric motor a mechanical load put upon it so great as to prevent economical working. One effect of such a load is to make the armature run so slowly as to unduly reduce the counter-electro-motive force and hence to permit so much current to pass through the coils as to heat them, perhaps injuriously. In this case the production of heat implies the waste of energy.

Wikipedia

Overload

Overload or overloaded may refer to:

Examples of use of Overload
1. Paris‘s statistics–laden pitch left an impression of information overload.
2. Jill teetered on the verge of emotional overload.
3. However, some GPs are concerned about immunisation overload.
4. The overload caused short circuits along the supply network.
5. "You‘ve got the problem of information overload," he says.