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9-letter words containing under

  • underfish — to catch fewer fish than the maximum amount permitted
  • underflow — to move along in a stream: The river flowed slowly to the sea.
  • underfong — to receive, comprehend, or trap
  • underfoot — under the foot or feet; on the ground; underneath or below: The climb was difficult because there were so many rocks underfoot.
  • underfund — to fail to provide sufficient funding for
  • undergird — to strengthen; secure, as by passing a rope or chain under and around: to undergird a top-heavy load.
  • undergoes — to be subjected to; experience; pass through: to undergo surgery.
  • undergone — to be subjected to; experience; pass through: to undergo surgery.
  • undergown — a gown worn under another article of clothing
  • undergrad — an undergraduate.
  • underhair — a growth of short hair lying beneath a longer growth; undercoat.
  • underhand — not open and aboveboard; secret and crafty or dishonorable: an underhand deal with the chief of police.
  • underheat — to heat insufficiently
  • underhung — Anatomy. (of the lower jaw) projecting beyond the upper jaw. having the lower jaw so projecting.
  • underived — not derived; fundamental, as an axiom or postulate; immediate.
  • underkeep — to suppress
  • underkill — insufficient capacity to defeat or destroy an enemy, especially using nuclear force.
  • underking — a ruler subordinate to a king
  • underlaid — placed or laid underneath, as a foundation or substratum.
  • underlain — to lie under or beneath; be situated under.
  • underleaf — (in liverworts) any of the leaves forming a row on the underside of the stem: usually smaller than the two rows of lateral leaves and sometimes absent
  • underlied — to lie under or beneath; be situated under.
  • underline — to mark with a line or lines underneath; underscore.
  • underling — a subordinate, especially one of slight importance.
  • underload — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • undermine — to injure or destroy by insidious activity or imperceptible stages, sometimes tending toward a sudden dramatic effect.
  • undermost — being the furthest under; lowest
  • undername — a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
  • undernote — a brief record of something written down to assist the memory or for future reference.
  • underpaid — to pay less than is deserved or usual.
  • underpart — the lower part or side: The underpart of the plane's fuselage scraped the treetops.
  • underpass — a passage running underneath, especially a passage for pedestrians or vehicles, or both, crossing under a railroad, road, etc.
  • underpeep — to peer under (something)
  • underplay — to act (a part) sketchily.
  • underplot — a plot subordinate to another plot, as in a novel.
  • underprop — to prop underneath; support; uphold.
  • underrate — to rate or evaluate too low; underestimate.
  • underripe — not completely ripe, as fruit.
  • underseal — a coating of a tar or rubber-based material applied to the underside of a motor vehicle to retard corrosion
  • underseas — beneath the surface of the sea.
  • underself — the part of a personality that remains hidden
  • undersell — to sell more cheaply than.
  • undershot — having the front teeth of the lower jaw projecting in front of the upper teeth, as a bulldog.
  • underside — an under or lower side.
  • undersign — to sign one's name under or at the end of (a letter or document); affix one's signature to.
  • undersize — undersized.
  • undersoil — subsoil.
  • undersold — to sell more cheaply than.
  • undersong — an accompanying secondary melody
  • underspin — backspin.
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