underween

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English

Etymology

From under- +‎ ween.

Verb

underween (third-person singular simple present underweens, present participle underweening, simple past and past participle underweened)

  1. (transitive) To undervalue.
    • 1837, Edward Fisher, ‎Thomas Boston, The Marrow of Modern Divinity: In Two Parts, page 290:
      ...in this Commandment is forbidden too high a conceit or esteem of ourselves, and so also is too mean a conceit, in underweening the good things that be in ourselves,
    • 1977, Cornell University, Epoch: Volumes 27-28:
      You'd better underween.
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    • 2012 January 12, tony cooper, “"Apothegmbusters4" - Nod = Wink to Blind Man”, in alt.philosophy (Usenet):
      Harrison has little to offer, but comparatively underweens.

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