under-

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See also: under and ûnder

English

Etymology

From Middle English under-, from Old English under-, from Proto-Germanic *under, from Proto-Indo-European *n̥dʰér (lower) and *n̥tér (inside). For more, see under.

Prefix

under-

  1. Beneath, under
    e.g. underground, underneath, underpass
  2. (figurative) To go from one side to the other; to progress along a path
    e.g. understand, undergo, underbear, undertake
  3. Less than, beneath in quantity
    e.g. underadditive, underage, underbound
  4. Deficient, below what is correct, insufficient
    e.g. underapply, underbill, underawe
  5. Subordinate to
    e.g. undersecretary, underling, underclass

Usage notes

  • In many common cases, this prefix is attached directly to a word. When forming new words, however, it is typically hyphenated until the word becomes common.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Derived terms

Translations

Anagrams

Norwegian Bokmål

Prefix

under-

  1. under-
  2. sub-

References

Norwegian Nynorsk

Alternative forms

Prefix

under-

  1. under-
  2. sub-

Derived terms

Old English

Etymology 1

From Proto-Germanic *under, from Proto-Indo-European *nter- (between, among), akin to Old English under (under, beneath), Old High German untar (between, among), Latin inter (between, among). More at inter-.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈun.der/ (as a nominal prefix)
  • IPA(key): /ˌun.der/ (as a verbal prefix)

Prefix

under-

  1. between, among
    understandanto understand (originally 'to stand between', 'be near to both sides')
    underscēotanto intercept

Etymology 2

From Proto-Germanic *under, from Proto-Indo-European *ndhero- (lower), akin to Old English under (between, among, in the presence of), Old High German untar (under), Latin infra (below, beneath).

Prefix

under-

  1. beneath
  2. subordinate to
    underlingunderling, subordinate
Derived terms

Swedish

Prefix

under-

  1. under-
  2. sub-

Derived terms

Anagrams