d]
| 1. | pt. and pp. of understand. |
| 2. | agreed upon; known in advance; assented to: It is the understood policy of this establishment to limit credit. |
| 3. | implied but not stated; left unexpressed: The understood meaning of a danger sign is “Do not approach.” |
verb, -stood, -stand⋅ing.| 1. | to perceive the meaning of; grasp the idea of; comprehend: to understand Spanish; I didn't understand your question. |
| 2. | to be thoroughly familiar with; apprehend clearly the character, nature, or subtleties of: to understand a trade. |
| 3. | to assign a meaning to; interpret: He understood her suggestion as a complaint. |
| 4. | to grasp the significance, implications, or importance of: He does not understand responsibility. |
| 5. | to regard as firmly communicated; take as agreed or settled: I understand that you will repay this loan in 30 days. |
| 6. | to learn or hear: I understand that you are going out of town. |
| 7. | to accept as true; believe: I understand that you are trying to be truthful, but you are wrong. |
| 8. | to construe in a particular way: You are to understand the phrase literally. |
| 9. | to supply mentally (something that is not expressed). |
| 10. | to perceive what is meant; grasp the information conveyed: She told them about it in simple words, hoping they would understand. |
| 11. | to accept tolerantly or sympathetically: If you can't do it, I'll understand. |
| 12. | to have knowledge or background, as on a particular subject: He understands about boats. |
| 13. | to have a systematic interpretation or rationale, as in a field or area of knowledge: He can repeat every rule in the book, but he just doesn't understand. |
un·der·stand (ŭn'dər-stānd') v. un·der·stood (-stŏŏd'), un·der·stand·ing, un·der·stands v. tr.
[Middle English understanden, from Old English understandan : under-, under- + standan, to stand; see stā- in Indo-European roots.] |
un·der·stood (ŭn'dər-stŏŏd') v. Past tense and past participle of understand. adj.
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