[go: up one dir, main page]

See also: under-dose

English

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From under- +‎ dose, by analogy with overdose.

Pronunciation

edit
  • Audio (US):(file)

Noun

edit

underdose (plural underdoses)

  1. An inadequate dose (of a medication).
    • 1871, E. D. E. N. Southworth, chapter 31, in Cruel as the Grave[1], Philadelphia: T.B. Peterson & Bros, page 333:
      [] I put laudanum in his coffee last night. I was afraid to put in too much for fear of killing him, so I suppose I didn’t put in enough, for he laid wide awake all night.”
      “Ah, yes! that would be the effect of an under-dose of laudanum.”
    • 1960, Muriel Spark, chapter 7, in The Bachelors, London: Macmillan:
      If Patrick were to add a little sugar to her urine specimen so that she would take a hefty dose of insulin, and then to make her take a good walk without her little tin of glucose [] she would probably pass out on the mountainside. Or suppose he substituted his own urine in the test tube so that she would take an under-dose?
  2. (figuratively) An inadequate amount of something.
    • 1955, Jim Kjelgaard, chapter 8, in The Lost Wagon[2], New York: Dodd, Mead & Co:
      “Seems as though sometimes I get an overdose of feeling, and an underdose of sense.”
    • 1979 September 21, Tom Shales, “Eischied’ Walks Tall”, in The Washington Post:
      It seems the kid suffers from an underdose of mother love, so he kills pretty girls—exactly the problem of Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho.”

Translations

edit

Verb

edit

underdose (third-person singular simple present underdoses, present participle underdosing, simple past and past participle underdosed)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To administer an inadequate dose (to someone or to oneself).
    • 1945, Alexander Fleming, Nobel acceptance speech, cited in Jenny Rohn, “The hunt is on for new antibiotics—but we have to start looking outside the lab,” The Guardian, 19 February, 2015,[3]
      The time may come when penicillin can be bought by anyone in the shops. Then there is the danger that the ignorant man may easily underdose himself and by exposing his microbes to non-lethal quantities of the drug make them resistant.
    • 2016, Kelly Close, letter to the editor, The New York Times, 29 February, 2016,[4]
      It is true that insulin costs are high; as a result some patients may underdose. We need better reimbursement to address that.
  2. (transitive) To administer an inadequate dose of (a medication).
    • 1679, Richard Fletcher, “Directions for the Use of that Excellent Medicine Fletcher’s Powder”, in The Vertues of that Well-Known and Often Experienced Medicine Fletcher’s Powder[5], London, page 6:
      [] a Child new-born may take an eighth or tenth part of a paper, a Child of a year old a quarter of a paper or a sixth part, 2, 3, or 4 years old a third 5, 6, 7, half a paper, &c. for you cannot hurt if you over or under dose it a little; the Medicine being safe.
    • 2013 July 26, Judy Mandell, “‘Critically Ill’ author Frederick Southwick on what ails our healthcare system”, in Los Angeles Times:
      An intern underdosed her heparin (blood thinner), and she suffered a large blood clot in a lung.
    • 2016 August 21, Samuel J. Mann, “The Scandal of Uncontrolled Hypertension: A Widely-Overlooked Remedy”, in HuffPost:
      One such drug class can solve uncontrolled hypertension in perhaps half of cases yet is widely under-prescribed and/or under-dosed, with tragic consequences.
  3. (figuratively, intransitive) To use a scant or inadequate amount of an ingredient or product.

Antonyms

edit

Translations

edit

Anagrams

edit