underget
English
editEtymology
editFrom under- + get. Compare Middle English underyeten (“to comprehend, perceive”), from Old English underġietan (“to understand, perceive, know”).
Pronunciation
editVerb
editunderget (third-person singular simple present undergets, present participle undergetting, simple past undergot, past participle undergot or undergotten)
- (rare, transitive, intransitive) To get less than expected or due.
- Antonym: overget
- 1885, Edmund B. Ivatts, Railway management at stations:
- Some companies hold their clerks responsible to account for the actual amount of the fares on tickets sold, and ignore the question of overgot and undergot money.
- 1920, Financial World, volume 33, page 8:
- There Is a Limit to Over-Paying and Undergetting
- 1923, Charles Vickers, Metals and their alloys:
- Those that underpay, underget.