Mate logo
Home
Apps
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogHelp CenterContact
Apps

iPhone + iPad

Help Center, release notes, Download

Mac + Safari

Help Center, release notes, Download

Google Chrome

Help Center, Download

Mozilla Firefox

Help Center, Download

Opera

Help Center, Download

Microsoft Edge

Help Center, Download
Support
DownloadHelp CenterSupported languagesRequest a refundRestore passwordRestore serial codesPrivacy policy
STAY IN TOUCH
ContactTwitterBlog
Site language
free services
Web translatorVerb conjugatorDer Die Das lookupUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms
Mate logo
Home
Apps
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogHelp CenterContact
Apps

iPhone + iPad

Help Center, release notes, Download

Mac + Safari

Help Center, release notes, Download

Google Chrome

Help Center, Download

Mozilla Firefox

Help Center, Download

Opera

Help Center, Download

Microsoft Edge

Help Center, Download
Support
DownloadHelp CenterSupported languagesRequest a refundRestore passwordRestore serial codesPrivacy policy
STAY IN TOUCH
ContactTwitterBlog
Site language
free services
Web translatorVerb conjugatorDer Die Das lookupUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms

Definition of "underpowered" in English

verb

  1. simple past and past participle of underpower

adjective

  1. Having insufficient power for its operation.

    • 1925, Stewart Edward White, New York: Grosset & Dunlap, Chapter 2, […] occasionally a flap-skitter duck, making up his mind to go a-visiting, gave himself over to the serious business of flight. Flap-flap-flap, skitter, skitter, skitter, went he, taxi-ing along like an underpowered airplane, leaving behind him incredible churnings of wake.
    • 2023, David Shariatmadari, “‘I hope I’m wrong’: the co-founder of DeepMind on how AI threatens to reshape life as we know it,” The Guardian, 2 September, 2023, Last month he [Mustafa Suleyman] was invited to the White House alongside Amazon, Microsoft and Google to sign up to an oversight regime, albeit a voluntary one. Given tech’s poor record at self-regulation, this may seem a little underpowered.