1. overlong - Adjective
2. overlong - Adverb
Too long.
Source: Webster's dictionaryLife is like an overlong drama through which we sit being nagged by the vague memories of having read the reviews. John Updike
A fantastic achievement and one that prevented the movie from becoming confusing, bloated and overlong and made it a masterpiece. Source: Internet
After all, that was the raison d’etre for the Hollywood Foreign Press Association bringing him back for a fifth time: to add some buzz to a self-congratulatory, overlong three-hour telecast. Source: Internet
But the movie is overlong and not especially gripping, and the strategy of one-shot done in real-time might not have been ideal for this story. Source: Internet
E0 and F0 could start overlong encodings, in this cast the lowest non-overlong-encoded code point is shown, marked by an asterisk "*". Source: Internet
I'd sooner believe that Moby Dick could swim up the drainpipe." citation Halliwell's Film Guide claimed the film was "despite some clever special effects, a tedious, overlong fantasy that is more excited by machinery than people." Source: Internet