0 past simple and past participle of undersell
1 made to seem less attractive or effective than something really is:
It's an opportunity to remind people of your undersold talents.
2 sold in smaller numbers of amounts than necessary or possible:
For example, music is undersold by the manner in which the researchers count pupils' reports of extra-curricular involvement.
If there is no methodological characterisation, analytical thinking may be undersold, undervalued, and diluted in its usefulness.
This is one policy that is never knowingly undersold.
Is it fair that these men's labour should be undersold?
He was concerned that "the worker whose whole livelihood depends upon the industry"concerned should not be"undersold".
They undersold the company in such a manner that the community lost £25 million.
Another proof of the efficiency of the industry is the complaints that are being made as to being undersold.
Can we afford to be undercut and undersold in the markets upon which we have depended?