How To Use Underplay In A Sentence

  • Some things are hard to write about. After something happens to you, you go to write it down, and either you over dramatize it, or underplay it, exaggerate the wrong parts or ignore the important ones. At any rate, you never write it quite the way you want to. Sylvia Plath 
  • Either you'll be enthralled by his underplayed persona or drift aimlessly and inattentively away from his soporific compositions.
  • ‘We shouldn't underplay the role celebrities play in the development of young people,’ he said.
  • The Mandy of the title truly is the star of the film, as almost all of the adults underplay their scenes with her to help her shine brighter. Mandy (1952) | Happy Share
  • Despite its subject, Menzel adopts an apparently incongruous lyricism and humanity, and a delicate and underplayed comedy.
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  • The more she underplays her singing, the better the results.
  • Given the suggestibility of footie folk it is impossible to underplay the significance of this apparently off-hand remark. Football and spectacles: Players make passes for men who wear glasses | Harry Pearson
  • There had been some flaccid rubatos in the preceding Allegro Assai and there were some underplayed syncopations in the Minuet and Trio but the cheer it received was well earned.
  • He underplays the role at times, but really gives the movie a boost when he is on screen.
  • Even if the latest Catholic reforms underplay the offertory ritual, it is not of itself without meaning or challenge.
  • I can't really put my finger on it, but I have realised that it is seriously underplayed in my life, and definitely merits more frequent airings, especially when I want to be contemplative.
  • But what this reading underplays is the extent to which the play is also a revenge drama.
  • We have to be careful lest in a search for cost-effective complementarities between Navy and Coast Guard we underplay the vital point that the first duty of the latter is excellence as a coast guard.
  • I knew he'd underplay the role he's had in the project.
  • As the private narrative develops into the modern novel, we see comic and tragic elements utilised, played off against each other, fused in tragi-comic works such as CATCH-22, or underplayed to achieve an illusion of naturalism or social realism. Strange Fiction 7
  • [T] he film's perceptiveness is frequently bracing, capturing the way starry-eyed proclamations and promises can foreshadow uglier truths, and - as in a sterling underplayed scene - the means by which simple gestures such as asking a girlfriend to call your relatives on your behalf can signal a momentous shift in trust and togetherness. GreenCine Daily: Flannel Pajamas.
  • The rest of the cast either underplays their role or overplays it to the point of being far too cartoonish.
  • More than anyone else, Bobby himself would wish to underplay his disability and to concentrate on his achievements, for that is really what is important to him.
  • People overplay the risks of cyberterrorism, but they underplay the risks of cybercrime.
  • Oddly, the report tried to underplay these important factors.
  • He is a master of understatement; all of his actors underplay their parts.
  • The baleful effect of overwhelming electoral landslides, usually worse than suggested by the cube rule, has also been underplayed.
  • The significance of the class and gender inequalities which are intertwined with the racism that black students encounter is thus underplayed.
  • She doesn't rely on the standard femme fatale clichés, but underplays the role.
  • The significance of the class and gender inequalities which are intertwined with the racism that black students encounter is thus underplayed.
  • His laid-back attitude possibly disguises some internal strife for there is no underplaying the importance of every point won and lost at this stage.
  • The mob scenes and concert craziness are actually underplayed, since no one would really believe the kind of mass frenzy the group created.
  • Underplayed story is the anger and disillusionment from the Left concerning Obama's Clintonista-heavy White House and cabinet, and the decidedly centrist shift in his proposals now that he's president-elect. Home Alone - Swampland - TIME.com
  • However, he underplays his subject's romantic idealization of the primitive, associated with a sort of nature-worship. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Using such words as “catenae” (connected series), “timeous” (early), “moloch” (an object of sacrifice), and “corban” (an offering to God), Madame railed at the ethics of the press, which she continued to accuse of underplaying the dangers of communism. The Last Empress
  • Also underplayed by the media, but probably a hot topic in black barbershops, was another Census report last week.
  • Owen has a tendency to underplay his roles - an approach that serves him well here.
  • After Andreas saw the work going into the Genie and some of the other characters in Aladdin, he realized he couldn’t compete with that kind of broadness, so he decided to underplay Jafar. 12th Marc Davis Celebration of Animation
  • And yet, we believe that these movements have tended to underplay or even deny a very important dimension of human life - the spiritual dimension.
  • One or two things seem to me underplayed (the great baroque invention of the Duet, for example), but thought has gone into explaining and illustrating most genres.
  • He took care to underplay the problem, even to Pete and Joe. THE PRESIDENT'S CHILD
  • The film's greatest strength is that it takes classic elements like perpetual rainfall and creepy subterranean settings and underplays them.
  • ‘Only a fool would underplay the important role you played in our history,’ he said.
  • His fans insisted that his naturalism and his underplaying refuted any residual sissiness that might be associated with acting.
  • Using such words as “catenae” (connected series), “timeous” (early), “moloch” (an object of sacrifice), and “corban” (an offering to God), Madame railed at the ethics of the press, which she continued to accuse of underplaying the dangers of communism. The Last Empress
  • But WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange suggested that the number of civilian casualties was being underplayed, saying the secret files show that U.S. reports use "self-exculpatory language, redefine civilian casualties as insurgent casualties, downplay the number of casualties. Afghan Government: NATO Rocket Killed 52 Civilians
  • The extreme unpleasantness of the mammogram is systematically and deliberately underplayed by the proponents of mass screening.
  • We often underplay the skills we have.
  • After all the set up, the reveal/twist is so underplayed as to make no sense - there are no consequences to anybody's actions.
  • It both underplays and overplays the melodrama of the scene at once, capturing something real and raw in what might've been a stock bit of overemoting schlock. Archive 2008-01-01
  • In the title role, he underplays the part nicely.
  • Dickens's rage against the New Poor Law, which precluded able-bodied paupers from relief, is underplayed.
  • He underplays the role, but that is what was required.
  • Using such words as “catenae” (connected series), “timeous” (early), “moloch” (an object of sacrifice), and “corban” (an offering to God), Madame railed at the ethics of the press, which she continued to accuse of underplaying the dangers of communism. The Last Empress
  • This is no different; the guy just knows how to underplay a role and spit out brilliant one-liners.
  • The point is important and is sometimes underplayed; it is well made in this volume too.
  • It seems that the source of Herman's queasiness is rooted in concerns about the property market in Southern Europe, many having holiday homes in the Med; growing commentary on the decline of Southern Europe's economies; a growing crescendo of remarks from Southern Eurpean politicians that are perceived as threatening the independence of the European Central Bank, a sine qua non for Germans to give up the Deutschmark; and a sudden ramping up of German inflation to an official 8.1% (which, if our own experience is anything to go by significantly underplays the reality). Archive 2008-06-08
  • The explanation is farcical and bizarre, yet there is mystery, almost coquetry, in the way Martel underplays it.
  • Andrian Fadeyev, Vishneva's loyal and well-matched partner over the years, also built his role by degrees, although he underplayed it nearly too well in the first act. Mariinsky's 'Giselle': Less is more
  • Their major claimed benefits may overplay the importance of sharing knowledge and expertise and underplay issues such as social conflict, cultural difference and opportunism.
  • Even they though are underplayed these days, as hockey seeks to woo that elusive grail - the family audience.
  • She never overplays her role nor underplays it - in essence, she was the perfect choice for this role and makes a stunning cinematic debut.
  • Depending on what aspects of the evidence you choose to stress or underplay, it's not that hard to conclude that belief or disbelief in afterlife is warranted.
  • Despite its subject matter, the film is unsentimental and avoids the conventions of melodrama, with some of the most intense scenes being quietly underplayed and restrained.
  • He underplayed the comic elements of the opera.
  • People overplay the risks of cyberterrorism, but they underplay the risks of cybercrime.
  • It required that I act just ‘perfect’, overacting or even underplaying the role would have ruined the effect of the film.
  • He wisely underplays his role, evoking a man of deep contradictions.
  • However, he underplays his subject's romantic idealization of the primitive, associated with a sort of nature-worship. The Times Literary Supplement
  • He took care to underplay the problem, even to Pete and Joe. THE PRESIDENT'S CHILD
  • An actor has to be creative, but he can underplay or overplay his role, so a director has to control that.
  • Instead, he underplays and it's a joy to watch him assume just the right mask of deferential blandness to manage his Colonel.
  • She never overplays her role nor underplays it - in essence, she was the perfect choice for this role and makes a stunning cinematic debut.
  • This classily produced and coolly graceful set features chunky Hot Club rhythm-guitar backings, lazily driving blues and subtly underplayed Hammond organ breaks.
  • She is suitably endearing, though that is due to her natural looks and good sense in underplaying her role.
  • The rest of the cast either underplays their role or overplays it to the point of being far too cartoonish.
  • Using such words as “catenae” (connected series), “timeous” (early), “moloch” (an object of sacrifice), and “corban” (an offering to God), Madame railed at the ethics of the press, which she continued to accuse of underplaying the dangers of communism. The Last Empress
  • In emphasizing the ‘rules of the game,’ the new institutionalism underplays the importance of power, position, and prestige in manipulating or ignoring those rules.
  • A strong script, able direction, and a stellar cast who underplay their roles make it very worthy of at least a rental.
  • However, one should never underplay the romantic potential of the Internet.

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