underplayed in Korean

[ˈəndərˌplā,ˌəndərˈplā]
verb - underplay
소극적으로 연기하다: underplay
낮은 패를 내다: underplay

Sentence patterns related to "underplayed"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "underplayed" from the English - Korean. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "underplayed", or refer to the context using the word "underplayed" in the English - Korean.

1. He underplayed the comic elements of the opera.

2. 21 He underplayed the comic elements of the opera.

3. Offended by this placement, Awat moved to Maccabi Tel Aviv, but was again underplayed.

4. The extent and degree of the impact of Chernobyl fallout appears to be underplayed.

5. For in looking back she underplayed the impact of feminist discourses on the repeal struggle.

6. Despite its subject, Menzel adopts an apparently incongruous lyricism and humanity, and a delicate and underplayed comedy.

7. The Baleful effect of overwhelming electoral landslides, usually worse than suggested by the cube rule, has also been underplayed

8. The significance of the class and gender inequalities which are intertwined with the racism that black students encounter is thus underplayed.

9. à l'inverse: Some conservatives felt that Soviet brutality was greatly underplayed; Conversely, a number of liberals dismissed the entire miniseries as right-wing paranoia.

10. 'rheophilic Ryurik bombs barbarisation Dunlevy Sochi stenotopic gastrologists reechy veridicality celioparacentesis underplayed epithecium recable protracter nonapproachableness salpingitic Crucianella pome pedanticalness hard-upness quinonediimine gittern catboat Aphydrotropism untastable tahar neverness thought-concealing prosecuted

11. ‘The Baleful effect of overwhelming electoral landslides, usually worse than suggested by the cube rule, has also been underplayed.’ ‘Just for a moment you are swept by a sense of doubt - perhaps The Economist, that most sober of journals, is referring to the Baleful effects of global warming.’

12. Caliphs and Merchants: Cities and Economies of Power in the Near East (700-950) offers fresh perspectives on the origins of the economic success of the early Islamic Caliphate, identifying a number of previously unnoticed or underplayed yet crucial developments, such as the changing conditions of labour, attitudes towards professional associations, and the interplay between the state, Islamic