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undervalue

/uhn-der-val-yoo/US // ˌʌn dərˈvæl yu //UK // (ˌʌndəˈvæljuː) //

估价过低,低估,低估了,价值低估

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    un·der·val·ued, un·der·val·u·ing.

    • : to value below the real worth; put too low a value on.
    • : to diminish in value; make of less value.
    • : to have insufficient regard or esteem for; hold too low an opinion of.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • It’s the classic private equity move to juice profits on undervalued assets.

  • There are some upright and useful varieties of the native eastern red cedar, perhaps undervalued because of its weediness in the wild.

  • Along with an undervalued currency, growth companies struggled to find attractive valuations on the local exchange.

  • Resilience is a quality that is much undervalued by our economic models generally around the world.

  • We also undervalue time because we don’t account for small losses of free time to the same extent as we account for small losses of money.

  • No country can or should or is authorized to undervalue India.

  • And even that those decisions will tend to undervalue the lives of people with Down's syndrom and other disabling conditions.

  • In a way the film is a perfect parable about moviemakers who undervalue their ability to entertain.

  • It was inevitable that Carver should undervalue moral suasion; a military man, he recognized only the arbitrament of brute force.

  • The world is sufficiently disposed to reproach the servants of the sanctuary; they should not undervalue each other.

  • The people are the carriers of a civilization that the world does not undervalue, of ideas that would be of great use to it.

  • The way to render human beings of any class despicable is to undervalue them; for disesteem will superinduce degeneracy.

  • The objections against this very probable view undervalue Ezra iv.