| undersign |
to sign one's name at the bottom of (a letter or document). |
| undersigned |
having signed at the end of a document, letter, or the like. [3 definitions] |
| undersized |
smaller than normal, required, or allowed. |
| underskirt |
a skirt, such as a petticoat, worn under another skirt, as in order to provide added shape and body. |
| underslung |
supported or suspended from above, as a vehicle chassis from the axles. |
| understaffed |
having too few workers. |
| understand |
to perceive the meaning, nature, or significance of. [9 definitions] |
| understandable |
able to be understood; comprehensible. [2 definitions] |
| understanding |
the intellectual process of one who understands; comprehension. [8 definitions] |
| understate |
to state or represent incompletely or too conservatively. [2 definitions] |
| understood |
past tense and past participle of understand. [3 definitions] |
| understudy |
to learn the role or function of so as to be able to substitute for (usu. an actor in a play). [3 definitions] |
| undersurface |
an underside. |
| undertake |
to take on (a task, project, challenge or the like); decide or start to do. [2 definitions] |
| undertaker |
one who undertakes something. [2 definitions] |
| undertaking |
the act of one who undertakes. [3 definitions] |
| under the circumstances |
given the facts as they are. |
| under-the-counter |
secret or illegal, as sales or payments; under-the-table. |
| under the counter |
secretively, esp. in order to evade the law. |
| under the hammer |
offered for sale at public auction. |
| under the lee |
the quarter toward which the sea wind is blowing; to leeward. |