0 to consider someone or something as less valuable or important than he, she, or it really is -- 低估;轻视;对…认识不足
All, because of social habituation, undervalue central human capabilities that they later come to value.
First, they undervalue the cognitive powers of pre-linguistic children, animals, and earlier forms of hominid.
This is necessary because those cases are undervalued in the strengthening and weakening layers.
This eclecticism informed a string of still undervalued, uncollected essays.
For me there seems to be little more than this: relativism, properly applied, is a good thing which archaeologist shouldn't undervalue.
Urban medievalists are rightly hesitant to undervalue the importance of ritual and ceremony in the daily life of towns.
We live in an era when, in my opinion, these more traditional geological talents have been undervalued in favour of numerical modelling and simulations.
At the very least these buildings undervalue the assets that comprise their assemblies.