English edit

Etymology edit

under- +‎ oxygenated

Adjective edit

underoxygenated (comparative more underoxygenated, superlative most underoxygenated)

  1. Having insufficient oxygen.
    Antonym: overoxygenated
    Hyponyms: hypoxemic, hypoxic; anoxemic, anoxic
    • 1983, William E. Neville, Intensive Care of the Surgical Cardiopulmonary Patient, page 182:
      This concept assumes that all underoxygenated blood in the arteries comes from a true shunt, a passage through the lungs with no oxygenation.
    • 1992, J.S. Schilling, S. Klotz, “The Influence of High Pressure on the Superconducting and Normal Properties of High Temperature Superconductors”, in Donald M Ginsberg, editor, Physical Properties Of High Temperature Superconductors III, page 123:
      We speculate that applying pressure to an underoxygenated sample of YBa2Cu3O7-y with oxygen defects may reduce the time that the sample needs to be annealed at room temperature to cause a given Tc increase.
    • 2007, Robert K. Cooper, Leslie L. Cooper, Flip the Switch, Lose the Weight, page 72:
      Researchers are reporting what I've long suspected—that most people are underoxygenated all day long.
    • 2008, Marty Nachel, Homebrewing For Dummies, page 322:
      Very obvious diacetyl flavor may indicate other problems, such as extremely warm fermentation temperatures, unhealthy yeast, underoxygenated wort, or bacterial contamination.
    • 2021, James E. Faust, John Dole, Cut Flowers and Foliages, page 281:
      Excessive irrigation may lead to root hypoxia (underoxygenated) or anoxic (no oxygen) conditions (Vartapetian et al., 2014) resulting in physiological stress responses in the plant.
  2. (figurative) Lacking vitality; lackluster.
    Near-synonyms: anemic, enervated
    • 1916, Gertrude Atherton, “The Sacrificial Altar”, in Harper's Monthly Magazine, volume 133, page 333:
      Louis by this time was eighteen, of medium height, as thin as all overworked, underfed, underoxygenated Lycée boys, with large gray eyes that were rarely raised, a long pale face, a long thin nose, a small thin-lipped mouth.
    • 1999, Entertainment Weekly: Year Book, page 33:
      The moments when a maturing Swain retreated from Jeremy Irons' embrace into a girly giggle were as chilling as any horror-movie scene, but also a funny blast of fresh air in Lyne's underoxygenated morality play.
    • 2013, The Ultimate Daily Show and Philosophy:
      He finds, not “demigods” but “ a combative group of exhausted, drunken, broken, petty, partisan, scheming, squabbling, bloviating, sensory-deprived, underoxygenated, fed-up, talked-out, overheated delegates so distraught they threatened violence, secession.
    • 2015, Nina George, The Little Paris Bookshop:
      'Right now, you look very ... underoxygenated,' Perdu heard Max Jordan's voice say.
    • 2015, Cathy Lubenski, Trashy Chic:
      Possibly her sheer pretentiousness, or that she knew everything about everything, or maybe because she treated her reporters like underoxygenated platypies.

Verb edit

underoxygenated

  1. simple past and past participle of underoxygenate