oversum
English
    
    
Noun
    
oversum (plural oversums)
- A whole that is more than the sum of its parts; superaddition.
-  2004, Max-Planck-Institut für Ausländisches und Internationales Patent-, Urheber- und Wettbewerbsrecht, Max Planck series on Asian intellectual property law, page 8:- The tradition consists in understanding a politically active unit as an oversum (that is, a super-additive entity): The whole is more than the sum of its parts.
 
-  2004, Christoph Antons, Michael Blakeney, Christopher Heath, Intellectual Property Harmonisation Within ASEAN and APEC, page 6:- It follows from this counterbalance of majority rule and inalienable absolutes within a given society that the latter is ordered according to the oversum principle: The whole is more than the sum of its parts.
 
-  2006, Manfred O. Hinz, Helgard K. Patemann, The Shade of New Leaves, page 315:- Democracy requires an oversum, a koiné, a res publica, a Genossenschaft, a commonwealth, a League such as the Iroquois, a Tewa-Pueblo, that is, an entity of which the citizens are members with membership duties and rights.
 
-  2008, Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Abhandlungen: Issue 132, page 343:- The Saxonian tradition does not know or rejects the cooperative, the oversum, or superaddition.
 
-  2014, Bernd Lindemann, Mechanisms in World and Mind:- Thus SB is an over-sum effect.
 
 
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Verb
    
oversum (third-person singular simple present oversums, present participle oversumming, simple past and past participle oversummed)
- To add up incorrectly, arriving at a total that is too large.
-  1941, The Accountant's Magazine - Volume 45, page 314:- In an account in the ledger, which has been ruled off as square, it is found that the credit side has been oversummed by £ 100.
 
-  1996, Dan Vogel, Early Mormon Documents - Volume 1, page 287:- andin measureyour measure you always oversum — and now I have now come to tell you that this is the last time thatI shall<never> never <shall> call again and you only want
 
-  2014, Roy A. Chandler, J. R. Edwards, Recurring Issues in Auditing (RLE Accounting):- Sometimes the totals are found to be short of the amounts entered in the Cash Book. In other cases, the sheets are found to be systematically oversummed; while again "dummy" mon may be inserted, or the calculations of the details of the pay may be overstated.
 
 
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