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English
Etymology
From under- + sing.
Pronunciation
Verb
undersing (third-person singular simple present undersings, present participle undersinging, simple past undersang, past participle undersung)
- (transitive, intransitive) To sing inadequately, or with too little vocal effort.
- 1858, “The Ballad Poetry of Scotland—Professor Aytoun” (review) in MacPhail’s Edinburgh Ecclesiastical Journal, no. 152:
- …the enthusiastic borderism of Scott, who, rather than that a freebooter should under-act his part, or a bard undersing his praise, took the liberty of sometimes inventing the action and then resounding its glories, and debiting both to the account of originals, quite innocent of either.
2015 November 5, Jon Caramanica, “At C.M.A. Awards, Triumph for Chris Stapleton and Country Music’s Fringes”, in New York Times:But the night’s true indictment of country’s man problem was the dullness of the performances by male stars exponentially more famous than Mr. Stapleton: Zac Brown, undersinging on “Beautiful Drug”; Kenny Chesney’s lethargic turn on “Save It for a Rainy Day”; Blake Shelton mugging for the cameras on “Gonna,” Dierks Bentley needlessly stoic on “Riser.”
- (transitive) To sing beneath, or in accompaniment to; to sing an undersong.
1851, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Prometheus Bound:Alas me! what a murmur and motion I hear,
As of birds flying near!
And the air undersings
The soft stroke of their wings—
And all life that approaches, I wait for in fear.
1990, John Hollander, Melodious Guile: Fictive Pattern in Poetic Language, pages 158, 161:Other post-Spenserian undersongs resonate with some of these implications… But even here, the stream of time is clearly the source of the Spenserian undersinging.
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