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38 Sentences With "taken on too much"

How to use taken on too much in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "taken on too much" and check conjugation/comparative form for "taken on too much". Mastering all the usages of "taken on too much" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Initially it felt like I had taken on too much.
When a country is said to be over-leveraged, it has taken on too much debt.
The accident did cause some experts to question whether the company has taken on too much, too quickly.
When they finally cut the anchor line, the boat had taken on too much and began to capsize.
This reinforced concerns that Canadians have taken on too much debt to get into the booming housing market.
A higher ratio means borrowers may have taken on too much debt than what their income can support.
A spokesman for SoFi disputed the notion that the company had taken on too much risk in its business.
It had taken on too much debt to cope with reduced Medicare and Medicaid payments, equipment upgrades and other issues.
Part of self-care is knowing when you've taken on too much and should ask for help, Dr. Fried says.
Public companies using low yielding debt have taken on  too much debt, and the cost of using equity to finance has become too expensive.
They had taken on too much debt and drilled so many wells that they had flooded the market with gas, sending its price into a tailspin.
For decades, brick-and-mortar retailers have taken on too much debt, built too many stores, and failed to understand the potential or practicalities of e-commerce.
Even for a person of Musk's capabilities, he has taken on too much - and Tesla's board, packed with his family, friends and business associates, has allowed it.
It's easier to fix a good business that's taken on too much debt than it is to overhaul one whose sales have declined because customers have lost interest.
Fellow chefs asked whether he had taken on too much and succumbed, as a celebrity chef, to the seemingly impossible demands for culinary prowess, media swagger and empire-building.
Because children's skeletons are immature, parents should look out for knee, lower leg and foot injuries as a sign that a child has taken on too much too fast.
For all his youthful energy and ambition, could Yannick Nezét-Séguin have taken on too much by simultaneously holding the music directorships of the Metropolitan Opera and the Philadelphia Orchestra?
"This has the potential to be a real crisis," said Gary N. Kleiman, an emerging-market investment consultant who argues that too many developing economies have taken on too much debt.
Walter Alanez, 23, a tourism student, said he worried that Mr. Morales had taken on too much Chinese debt and wasted money on questionable projects that opened the door for widespread corruption.
Per Bankrate's findings, 16% of respondents feel they've taken on too much credit card debt, 11% say they have too much student loan debt and 7% say they've bought more house than they can afford.
Citing programs in San Francisco and elsewhere, a member of the King County Council, Reagan Dunn, recently proposed a large expansion of the region's bus-ticket programs, arguing that it has taken on too much of the burden.
But where others saw Uber's travails as a symbol of Silicon Valley comeuppance, Khosrowshahi saw something less loaded: a sophisticated tech company that had taken on too much, too quickly, and whose systems groaned under the weight and confusion.
Years of cheap mortgage costs following the global financial crisis have raised concerns some Canadians have taken on too much housing debt and economists are watching to see how borrowers adjust to both the tighter lending rules and higher interest rates.
Within a matter of months, investment banks like Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers collapsed from having taken on too much risk, predominantly in the housing market, and by the fall of that year both of my parents had lost their jobs.
A SoFi spokesman told The Times for the article that the company had not taken on too much risk and that the board had investigated the dispute with Ms. Munoz in 2012 and had found no evidence of a romantic or sexual relationship.
While Canada avoided the worst of the housing crash that hit the United States a decade ago, prices have risen nearly in a straight line since, nearly doubling, raising worries consumers have taken on too much debt and are at risk if prices drop.
There are crises that happen periodically over the decades, and if you're mispositioned, if you've taken on too much risk, if you don't have adequate capital, if you don't make every decision as if the bad thing can happen the next day, if you don't think like that and you leave yourself exposed, there are many people who collapse.
Massie, p. 323 Badly holed, Patrol had taken on too much water to return to Hartlepool, but was able to reach the Middlesbrough docks.Corbett, p. 35 After undergoing extensive repairs she joined the 7th Destroyer Flotilla in the Humber in 1915.
He and Carolyn then get married. Harold and Carolyn later return for their honeymoon and tell Lou that he has taken on too much at the car yard and that he needs to slow down. Lou does not listen to them and he later collapses. Harold tells Lou to start taking his health seriously and Lou announces his intentions to sell the car yard.
Waters attempted to subvert the Momentary Lapse of Reason tour by contacting promoters in the US and threatening to sue them if they used the Pink Floyd name. Gilmour and Mason funded the start-up costs with Mason using his Ferrari 250 GTO as collateral. Early rehearsals for the upcoming tour were chaotic, with Mason and Wright entirely out of practice. Realising he had taken on too much work, Gilmour asked Ezrin to assist them.
Spizer, p. 260. Leng writes of this performance of "Dark Horse": "Anyone wondering what Harrison's voice sounded like on the Dark Horse Tour need look no further: this track was cut only days before the first date in Vancouver. Although the band sounded good, his voice was in shreds ..."Leng, p. 155. Later, Harrison would admit he was "knackered" by the time he arrived in Los Angeles, having simply taken on too much over the previous year.
Harold arrives late and he and Carolyn are married. Harold and Carolyn return from their honeymoon and try to tell Lou that he has taken on too much at the car yard, but Lou does not listen to them and he later collapses. Carolyn accompanies Harold to the hospital, where they are told Lou will be fine. Harold and Carolyn begin packing the van, ready to leave when Callum asks them to get Sonya to move back in with him and Toadie.
A photo-montage of the stage on the Momentary Lapse Tour Pink Floyd decided to tour for the album before it was complete. Early rehearsals were chaotic; Mason and Wright were out of practice, and, realising he had taken on too much work, Gilmour asked Ezrin to take charge. Matters were complicated when Waters contacted several US promoters and threatened to sue if they used the Pink Floyd name. Gilmour and Mason funded the start-up costs; Mason, separated from his wife, used his Ferrari 250 GTO as collateral.
The West India Bank, which had taken on too much risk, went bust during the crisis and the Colonial Bank was also put under strain. The international silver crisis of 1873 signalled the end of the silver dollar era in the West Indies and silver dollars were demonetized in Tobago in 1879 and in Trinidad at around the same period. This left a state of affairs, in which the British coinage circulated, being reckoned in the private sector using dollar accounts at an automatic conversion rate of 1 dollar = 4 shillings 2 pence.
By this time, however, the ship had already taken on too much water through its port-side gun ports, and the drum was never sounded. The ship tilted heavily to port, causing a sudden inrush of water and a burst of air out the starboard side. The barge along the port side which had been unloading the rum was caught in the masts as the ship turned, briefly delaying the sinking, but losing most of her crew. Royal George quickly filled up with water and sank, taking with her around 900 people, including up to 300 women and 60 children who were visiting the ship in harbour.
Chiam See Tong, the SPP's secretary-general, said his party would fight to win back Potong Pasir Single Member Constituency, and said that despite being defeated in Bishan–Toa Payoh Group Representation Constituency, he would continue in politics, health permitting. He also questioned the margin of votes in Potong Pasir, contested by his wife, saying there was "funny business" happening. A petition calling for a by-election in the constituency was started by SPP supporters and Potong Pasir residents. The National Solidarity Party, which contested the most seats of all opposition parties, admitted it may have taken on too much, with its leader Goh Meng Seng telling reporters that he would be "personally responsible" for the party's failure to win a single seat.
He decided not to rescind this order and replace it with one for all his ships to tack together, reversing the order of sailing, as this might cause confusion. This gave Albemarle a four or five mile head start, too much for the Dutch to overtake him before nightfall, as the sun had almost set and the wind was dying away. During his retreat, Albemarle placed 15 of his strongest and least damaged ships including his Royal Charles in line abreast as a rear-guard, and ordered the six most badly damaged to make their own way to port. The St Paul (the former Dutch Sint Paulus) had taken on too much water to keep with the other ships and was burned to prevent capture after its crew had been taken off.
Dancing the jitterbug, Los Angeles, 1939 According to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) the word "jitterbug" is a combination of the words "jitter" and "bug"; both words are of unknown origin. The first use of the word "jitters" quoted by the OED is from 1929, Act II of the play Strictly Dishonorable by Preston Sturges where the character Isabelle says: "Willie's got the jitters" is answered by a judge "Jitters?" to which Isabelle answers "You know, he makes faces all the time." The second quote in the OED is from the N.Y. Press from 2 April 1930: "The game is played only after the mugs and wenches have taken on too much gin and they arrive at the state of jitters, a disease known among the common herd as heebie jeebies." According to H. W. Fry in his review of Dictionary of Word Origins by Joseph Twadell Shipley in 1945 the word "jitters" "is from a spoonerism ['bin and jitters' for 'gin and bitters']...and originally referred to one under the influence of gin and bitters".

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