1
ADJ
If you describe someone's behaviour or feelings as
understandable
, you think that they have reacted to a situation in a natural way or in the way you would expect. □
2
ADJ
If you say that something such as a statement or theory is
understandable
, you mean that people can easily understand it. □
under|stand|ing ◆◇◇ /ʌ ndə r stæ nd I ŋ/ (understandings )
1
N‑VAR
If you have an
understanding of
something, you know how it works or know what it means. □ [+
2
ADJ
If you are
understanding
towards someone, you are kind and forgiving. □
3
N‑UNCOUNT
If you show
understanding
, you show that you realize how someone feels or why they did something, and are not hostile towards them. □
4
N‑UNCOUNT
If there is
understanding
between
people, they are friendly towards each other and trust each other. □ [+
5
N‑COUNT
An
understanding
is an informal agreement about something. □ [+
6
N‑SING
[oft N
that] If you say that it is your
understanding
that
something is the case, you mean that you believe it to be the case because you have heard or read that it is. □
7
PHRASE
If you agree to do something
on the understanding that
something is true, you do it because you have been told that the other thing is definitely true. □
under|state
/ʌ
ndə
r
ste
I
t/ (understates
, understating
, understated
) VERB
If you
understate
something, you describe it in a way that suggests that it is less important or serious than it really is. □ [V
n]
under|stat|ed
/ʌ
ndə
r
ste
I
t
I
d/ ADJ
[ADJ
n] If you describe a style, colour, or effect as
understated
, you mean that it is not obvious. □
under|state|ment /ʌ ndə r ste I tmənt/ (understatements )
1
N‑COUNT
If you say that a statement is an
understatement
, you mean that it does not fully express the extent to which something is true. □
2
N‑UNCOUNT
Understatement
is the practice of suggesting that things have much less of a particular quality than they really have. □
under|stood /ʌ ndə r stʊ d/ Understood is the past tense and past participle of understand .