underfoot

Etymology
From, , equivalent to en. Cognate with 🇨🇬. Compare also 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * 1) Situated under one's foot or feet.
 * 2) In the way; placed so as to obstruct or hinder.
 * 3) Downtrodden; abject.
 * 1) Downtrodden; abject.
 * 1) Downtrodden; abject.

Adverb

 * 1) Under one's foot or feet.
 * The workers were all big, burly, hard-hearted men, tromping through the marsh in their heavy boots without sparing so much as a single thought for the masses of tiny frogs they crushed underfoot.
 * 1) In the way; situated so as to obstruct or hinder.
 * It would be easier to do a big project like that someday when we don't have a bunch of newcomers underfoot.
 * 1) In the way; situated so as to obstruct or hinder.
 * It would be easier to do a big project like that someday when we don't have a bunch of newcomers underfoot.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: под краката
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Finnish: jalkojen alla
 * French: sous les pieds
 * German: unter den Füßen, unter die Füße
 * Hungarian: útban
 * Japanese:
 * Manx: fo chosh
 * Polish: pod nogami, pod nogi
 * Russian: под нога́ми, под но́ги

Noun

 * 1) A storage compartment that sits below the deck of a boat.

Verb

 * 1)  To provide a footing beneath; to shore up or underpin.
 * 2)  To assign a column summary that is less than the sum of all the entries in that column.
 * 1)  To assign a column summary that is less than the sum of all the entries in that column.
 * 1)  To assign a column summary that is less than the sum of all the entries in that column.
 * 1)  To assign a column summary that is less than the sum of all the entries in that column.