Sentences with over and over
o·ver and o·ver
O o - He plays the same songs over and over.
- The roof over one's head.
- To leap over a wall.
- There is no one over her in the department now.
- Throw a sheet over the bed.
- I can't imagine what has come over her.
- To hit someone over the head.
- At various places over the country.
- To roam over the estate; to show someone over the house.
- To travel all over Europe.
- To go over a bridge.
- Lands over the sea.
- The water is over his shoulders.
- Over a mile; not over five dollars.
- A big improvement over last year's turnout.
- Chosen over another applicant.
- The message was sent over a great distance.
- To adjourn over the holidays.
- Over a long period of years.
- To quarrel over a matter.
- To fall asleep over one's work.
- He told me over the phone. I heard it over the radio.
- A roof that hangs over.
- The furniture was covered over with dust.
- He was known the world over.
- They live over by the hill.
- To sail over.
- Toss the ball over, will you?
- The soup boiled over. The bathtub ran over.
- To read a paper over; Think it over.
- Hand the money over. He made the property over to his brother.
- Over in Japan.
- To knock over a glass of milk.
- She turned the bottle over. The dog rolled over.
- Do the work over.
- Twenty times over.
- To pay the full sum and something over.
- Five goes into seven once, with two over.
- To stay over till Monday.
- Why don't you come over for lunch?
- Insufficient tact and overaggressiveness are two of his problems.
- When the war was over.
- Material printed all over with a floral design.
- It seemed miraculous that the feud was all over with.
- The director had the choir sing one passage over again.
- A profit over and above what they had anticipated.
- They played the same record over and over.
- Many of the boys who went over there never came back.
- Let's get this thing over with, so that we don't have to worry about it any more.