under-accommodated

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English

Verb

under-accommodated

  1. simple past and past participle of under-accommodate

Adjective

under-accommodated (comparative more under-accommodated, superlative most under-accommodated)

  1. (ophthalmology) Involving a focal point that falls short of the retina.
    • 1975, Frederick M. Toates, Control theory in biology and experimental psychology, page 129:
      The eye is under-accommodated for near objects but over-accommodated for distant ones.
    • 2002, Ian P. Howard, Brian J. Rogers, Seeing in Depth - Volume 1, →ISBN, page 363:
      Assume that the receptors are aligned with a point on the nasal side of the pupil, (a) For an under-accommodated image, light rays on the nasal side are better aligned with receptors than those on the temporal side, (b) For an over-accommodated image, temporal light rays are better aligned with receptors than nasal rays.
    • 2008, Christopher Dainty, Adaptive Optics for Industry and Medicine, →ISBN:
      If the eye is over-accommodated the derivative of the changes in lens power and the derivative of the changes in contrast will have the opposite signs as these two signals will be out of phase; and vice versa for an under-accommodated eye.
  2. Providing insufficient housing for the number of people who need to live in a place.
    • 1955, Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons, Parliamentary Debates: Official Report - Volume 537, page 222:
      The local authority is continually seeking to utilise to the full requisitioned property and any municipal property which it had. It often removes people from under-accommodated property so that it can house people from overcrowded property.
    • 1958, Municipal Journal, Public Works Engineer Contractor's Guide:
      In common with many other local authorities West Kesteven has found that a proportion of its houses are " under-accommodated."
    • 1974, The Commonwealth Forestry Review - Volumes 53-54, page 13:
      The University Schools are still under-accommodated, under-staffed and underfinanced.
    • 2012, Survey of London: Woolwich, page 250:
      The Act of 1807 that created Town Commissioners for Woolwich (see page 22) empowered the new body to purchase and rebuild the under-accommodated and under-regulated market on the north side of Woolwich High Street (see page 49).
  3. Having an inadequate level of accommodation.
    • 1993, Maryland journal of contemporary legal issues - Volumes 5-6, page 266:
      Recent studies of court accessibility show that despite legislation demanding accessibility and despite progress in some areas, people with disabilities remain significandy under-served and under-accommodated in courts in general.
    • 1998, Deborah Ann Dyson, DPRMA: a medium access control protocol for wireless multimedia networks, page 184:
      Displaced data users are added to the queue of users awaiting further service. If the new user cannot be fully accommodated, it is also added to a queue of under-accommodated users.
    • 2016, Lin Chen, Evolving Eldercare in Contemporary China: Two Generations, One Decision, →ISBN:
      The findings in this study suggest that under-accommodated intergenerational communication may occur because children focus more on reducing their own caregiving pressure than on meeting their parents' actual emotional and instrumental needs.