low-cost |
not expensive; available at a low price or cost. |
Low Countries |
the lowland region in northern Europe comprising the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg. |
low-cut |
of a dress, blouse, or similar garment, cut so that the neck-line is low and some portion of the chest area of the wearer is not covered. |
lowdown |
(informal) true and important information, esp. as opposed to what is apparent or popularly accepted (usu. prec. by "the"). |
low-down |
(informal) nasty; mean; contemptible. |
lower1 |
to cause to move to a position below; let down. [9 definitions] |
lower2 |
to become dark or ominous, as the weather. [3 definitions] |
Lower Carboniferous |
see "Mississippian." |
lower-case |
of a letter of the alphabet, having a form smaller than and often different from the upper-case or capitalized form. [3 definitions] |
lower case |
in printing, the tray containing the type for the smaller, noncapital letters. (Cf. upper case.) |
lower class |
the socioeconomic class or classes below the middle class; working class; proletariat. |
lowerclassman |
a freshman or sophomore in a high school or college; underclassman. |
lower criticism |
textual criticism and examination of the Bible. (Cf. higher criticism.) |
lower house |
(often cap.) in a bicameral legislature, the branch that is usu. more representative and has the larger number of members. |
lowering |
dark and gloomy, as the weather. [2 definitions] |
lowermost |
lower than all others; lowest. |
lower world |
the habitation of the dead; nether world; underworld. [2 definitions] |
low-fat |
containing relatively less fat than comparable foods, diets, or cooking styles. |
low frequency |
any radio frequency between thirty and three hundred kilohertz per second. |
Low German |
a subbranch of Germanic, other than High German, that includes English, Dutch, Flemish, and Frisian. (Cf. High German.) [2 definitions] |
low-grade |
of inferior value or quality. [2 definitions] |