UNDEMONSTRABLE
UNDEMON'STRABLE, adjective1. Not capable of fuller evidence.2. Not capable of demonstration.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
3.187 entries
UNDEMON'STRABLE, adjective1. Not capable of fuller evidence.2. Not capable of demonstration.
UNDENI'ABLE, adjective That cannot be denied; as undeniable evidence.
UNDENI'ABLY, adverb So plainly as to admit no contradiction or denial.
UNDEPEND'ING, adjective Not dependent.
UNDEPLO'RED, adjective Not lamented.
UNDEPO'SABLE, adjective s as z. That cannot be deposed from office.
UNDEPRA'VED, adjective Not corrupted; not vitiated.
UNDEP'RECATED, adjective Not deprecated.
UNDEPRE'CIATED, adjective Not depreciated; not lowered in value.
UNDEPRI'VED, adjective Not deprived; not divested of by authority; not stripped of any possession.
UNDER, preposition1. Beneath; below; so as to have something over or above. He stood under a tree; the carriage is under cover. We may see things under water; we have a cellar u...
UNDER-SHER'IFF, noun A sheriff's deputy.
UNDERAC'TION, noun Subordinate action; action not essential to the main story.The least episodes or underactions - are parts necessary to the main design.
UNDERA'GENT, noun A subordinate agent.
UNDERBEAR, verb transitive1. To support; to endure.2. To line; to guard; as cloth of gold underborne with blue tinsel. obsolete
UNDERBEARER, noun In funerals, one who sustains the corpse.
UNDERBID', verb transitive To bid or offer less than another; as in auctions, when a contract or service is set up to the lowest bidder.
UN'DERBRED, adjective Of inferior breeding or manners.
UN'DERBRUSH, noun Shrubs and small trees in a wood or forest, growing under large trees.
UNDERBUY, verb transitive To buy at less than a thing is worth. [Not used.]
UNDERCHAMBERLAIN, noun A deputy chamberlain of the exchequer.
UN'DERCLERK, noun A clerk subordinate to the principal clerk.
UN'DERCROFT, noun A vault under the choir or chancel of a church; also, a vault or secret walk under ground.
UNDERCUR'RENT, noun A current below the surface of the water.
UNDERDITCH', verb transitive To form a deep ditch or trench to drain the surface of land.
UNDERDO, verb intransitive1. To act below one's abilities.2. To do less than is requisite.
UN'DERDOSE, noun A quantity less than a dose.UNDERDO'SE, verb intransitive To take small doses.