English edit

Etymology edit

under- +‎ attended

Adjective edit

underattended (comparative more underattended, superlative most underattended)

  1. Attended by too few people.
    • 1986 December, Melik Kaylan, “Downtown: It's Like You Know...”, in Spy, page 53:
      At 4D, husky boys Roman Ricardo, Ford Croell, Doug E. Fresh, Vito Bruno and Russel Buckingham attempt to make the underattended club seem crowded.
    • 1999, The Current Digest of the Post-Soviet Press:
      While classrooms in big cities are often overcrowded, underattended rural schools have almost as many teachers as students - a situation one doesn't see even in elite preparatory schools.
    • 2015, J.C. Hallman, B & Me: A True Story of Literary Arousal, →ISBN, page 21:
      Baker had appeared recently at a Canadian book festival, an event that the blogger claimed was woefully underattended, like Salter's reading.
  2. Given too little attention.
    • 2002, Paul Allatson, Latino Dreams: Transcultural Traffic and the U.S. National Imaginary, →ISBN:
      The selection includes novels by authors who have received little academic attention — Abraham Rodriguez, Achy Obejas, and Benjamin Alire Saenz — along with underattended texts from more renowned writers — Rosario Ferre, Coco Fusco, and Guillermo Gómez-Peña.
    • 2015, Peter DeLeon, Thinking About Political Corruption, →ISBN:
      This book has been a more difficult book to write than I had anticipated. I now have a very intimate appreciation of why the analysis of political corruption is an underattended subject.
    • 2015, Robert K. Yin, Qualitative Research from Start to Finish, →ISBN:
      One is to put more energy into collecting data from the unit at the underattended data collection level, so that the emerging findings more closely reflect the main topic.

Verb edit

underattended

  1. simple past and past participle of underattend