underestimate

underestimate
verb
(to estimate (a person, a thing etc) at less than his or its real amount, value, strength etc: Never underestimate your opponent!) subestimar
underestimate
tr[(n) ʌndər'estɪmət; (vb) ʌndər'estɪmeɪt]
noun
1 infravaloración nombre femenino, menosprecio
transitive verb
1 infravalorar, subestimar
underestimate [.ʌndər'ɛstə.meɪt] vt, -mated ; -mating : subestimar, menospreciar
underestimate
v.
subestimar v.
tener en menos de lo que merece v.
valorar en menos del valor real v.
'ʌndər'estəmeɪt, ˌʌndər'estɪmeɪt
transitive verb
a) (guess too low)

they underestimated the cost by $500 — calcularon el costo en 500 dólares menos de lo que correspondía, al calcular el costo se quedaron cortos en 500 dólares

b) (underrate) subestimar
1.
[ˌʌndǝr'estɪmɪt]
N estimación f demasiado baja, cálculo m demasiado bajo
2.
['ʌndǝr'estɪmeɪt]
VT [+ strength, importance, value, person] subestimar, menospreciar

you shouldn't underestimate her — no deberías subestimarla

I underestimated the size of the sofa — al calcular las dimensiones del sofá me quedé corta

they had underestimated the size of the problem — no le habían dado al problema la importancia que merecía

* * *
['ʌndər'estəmeɪt, ˌʌndər'estɪmeɪt]
transitive verb
a) (guess too low)

they underestimated the cost by $500 — calcularon el costo en 500 dólares menos de lo que correspondía, al calcular el costo se quedaron cortos en 500 dólares

b) (underrate) subestimar

English-spanish dictionary. 2013.

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  • underestimate — un‧der‧es‧ti‧mate [ˌʌndərˈestmeɪt] verb [transitive] to think that something is smaller than it really is: • We underestimated our operating costs. • The official statistics seriously underestimate actual unemployment. underestimate… …   Financial and business terms

  • Underestimate — Un der*es ti*mate, v. t. To set to? low a value on; to estimate below the truth. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Underestimate — Un der*es ti*mate, n. The act of underestimating; too low an estimate. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • underestimate — I verb belittle, deprecate, depreciate, detract from, discredit, disesteem, disparage, do scant justice to, make light of, minimize, minoris aestimare, minoris facere, misjudge, misprize, rate below the true value, rate too low, run down, set at… …   Law dictionary

  • underestimate — (v.) 1812, to estimate at too low an amount, from UNDER (Cf. under) + ESTIMATE (Cf. estimate) (v.). Meaning to rank too low, undervalue is recorded from 1850. Related: Underestimated; underestimating …   Etymology dictionary

  • underestimate — [v] minimize; rate too low belittle, deprecate, depreciate, disesteem, disparage, make light of*, miscalculate, miscarry, not do justice*, put down*, sell short*, slight, think too little of*, underrate, undervalue; concepts 12,54,764 Ant.… …   New thesaurus

  • underestimate — ► VERB 1) estimate (something) to be smaller or less important than it really is. 2) regard (someone) as less capable than they really are. ► NOUN ▪ an estimate that is too low. DERIVATIVES underestimation noun …   English terms dictionary

  • underestimate — [un΄dər es′tə māt΄; ] for n. [, un΄dər es′təmit] vt. underestimated, underestimating to set too low an estimate on or for n. an estimate that is too low underestimation n …   English World dictionary

  • underestimate — [[t]ʌ̱ndəre̱stɪmeɪt[/t]] underestimates, underestimating, underestimated 1) VERB If you underestimate something, you do not realize how large or great it is or will be. [V n] None of us should ever underestimate the degree of difficulty women… …   English dictionary

  • underestimate — I UK [ˌʌndərˈestɪˌmeɪt] / US verb [transitive] Word forms underestimate : present tense I/you/we/they underestimate he/she/it underestimates present participle underestimating past tense underestimated past participle underestimated * 1) to think …   English dictionary

  • underestimate — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} (also underestimation) noun ADJECTIVE ▪ gross, serious, significant ▪ The official figures are a gross underestimate of the true number. ▪ slight PREPOSITION …   Collocations dictionary

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