English edit

Etymology edit

under- +‎ priced

Adjective edit

underpriced (comparative more underpriced, superlative most underpriced)

  1. Having a relatively or abnormally low price.
    • 2009 January 2, Bill Carter, “Time Warner and Viacom Reach Agreement on Cable Shows”, in New York Times[1]:
      Dauman, said the increase was justified because MTV Networks had been underpriced compared with other cable networks with fewer viewers.
  2. Underestimated.
    • 2023 August 8, Janan Ganesh, “The oneness of Ron DeSantis and Rishi Sunak”, in Financial Times[2]:
      The case that Sunak is underpriced (though still unlikely) to remain prime minister is one I have made before. It rests on: the limited value of voting-intention polls this far out from an election, the competitiveness of his personal ratings with those of the Labour party leader, and the historic rarity of Britain turning decisively left when it isn’t in a good mood []

Antonyms edit

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