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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
underpay
verb
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ At one point Truitte realized that he had been underpaying Alvin by a large amount.
▪ At that rate of interest, it was almost good business to underpay your taxes.
▪ Borrowers who underpay tax if interest rates rise must give any unpaid interest to the Revenue in the subsequent 12 months.
▪ The current account mortgage lets you overpay and underpay and there are no penalties.
▪ The U. S. Treasury loses an estimated $ 130 billion each year because of citizens who underpay or file no return.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Underpay

Underpay \Un`der*pay"\, v. t. To pay inadequately.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
underpay

1817, from under + pay (v.). Related: underpaid (1762); underpaying.

Wiktionary
underpay

vb. To pay someone less than the value of their work.

WordNet
underpay
  1. v. pay too little [ant: overpay]

  2. [also: underpaid]

Usage examples of "underpay".

An underpaid sleuth with a cubby-hole and a nightstick and a remit to keep one eye on the shifty characters who walked in off the street and an even beadier eye on the dodgy ones who worked there.

We-Hate-Wal-Mart manifesto: It tramples small business, underpays and overworks its employees, discriminates against blacks and women, fights dirty against unions, and rapes the environment.

All these associations, societies, brotherhoods, alliances, institutes, and so on, which must now be counted by the ten thousand in Europe alone, and each of which represents an immense amount of voluntary, unambitious, and unpaid or underpaid work-- what are they but so many manifestations, under an infinite variety of aspects, of the same ever-living tendency of man towards mutual aid and support?

The assignment was given to an overworked and underpaid technician whose job was to communicate with one of the astronavigators, and translate his instructions into code for the onboard computers on the three spacecraft.

He sees that the soldier is neglected, meanly underpaid and hypocritically despised by the people whose incomes he safeguards.

Here she is, overworked and underpaid, buried alive under manuscripts and query letters.

Another stood by with a plastic drip-feed while Conner officiated with all the unctuous politeness of an underpaid head waiter.

Instantly, traffic was heavy, sidewalks and streets congested with nurses, dietitians, orderlies, custodians, security guards, administrators, resident doctors and chaplains, all of them worn out, underpaid and cranky.

You will also experience a wildly selective generosity, the also-rans routinely overworked and underpaid, the front-runners smothered in celebrity purchases — jewels, furs, paintings, cars, and what Californians call a 'home'.

Since the overworked and underpaid staff at the Baltimore City Hospital emergency room zapped him back in less than ninety seconds, he wasn't dead very long.

The viewpoint character in the Captain's story was the underpaid second chair French horn player in the Lobsterville Symphony Orchestra who had just lost his wife to a professional ice hockey player.

So, if the underpaid farmer stashes away part of his crop and sells it to the persuasive city slicker for double the legal rate, who can catch himor blame him?

It is well understood in political circles diat public office or major party office is almost always badly underpaid for the talent and experience die jobs need.

When you're a hungry, underpaid line cook, those filet mignons you're searing off by the dozens look mighty good.

All that human need, ten and thirty-five-dollar checks tremblingly enclosed, the rage, power fantasies, sexual speculations, unified gravity theories, and texts on the Apocalypse skimmed by the underpaid Youth of America, the reports synchronically indulgent and dismissive.