English language

How to pronounce undershoot in English?

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Type Words
Type of land, set down
Type Words
Type of miss

Examples of undershoot

undershoot
But, if the savings undershoot it will be difficult to make adjustments later.
From the guardian.co.uk
Moreover, history shows that after a boom prices usually undershoot their fair value.
From the economist.com
After a big overshoot on the upside, share prices can undershoot by as much on the way down.
From the economist.com
If that turns out to be too optimistic then growth, and trade, could undershoot its forecasts.
From the economist.com
The main reason cited is a fear of an undershoot on inflation.
From the thisismoney.co.uk
Earlier in the day, BP had been hurt by concerns that its third-quarter profits could undershoot forecasts.
From the telegraph.co.uk
The next step in the chain of reasoning is to determine whether it's costlier to overshoot or undershoot.
From the economist.com
Such action, if effective, would also slow the economy and might cause inflation to undershoot its target.
From the economist.com
Draghi said the ECB would ensure that inflation did not undershoot or exceed the central bank's target.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
  • Fall short of (the runway) in a landing; "The plane undershot the runway"
  • Shoot short of or below (a target)
  • In signal processing, control theory, electronics, and mathematics, overshoot is when a signal or function exceeds its steady-state value. It arises especially in the step response of bandlimited systems such as low-pass filters. ...
  • To not shoot far enough or well enough
  • To land short of a runwway or planned landing spot. Opposite is OVERSHOOT.
  • The difference in temperature between the temperature a process goes to, below the set point, after the cooling cycle is turned off and the set point temperature.
  • The final, hyperpolarizing phase of an action potential, typically caused by the voltage-dependent efflux of a cation such as K^+.
  • Undershoot refers to the amount by which voltage or frequency drops below the nominal value as the voltage regulator or governor responds to changes in load.
  • Situation where a digital line does not meet up with its intended boundary line. The space between the two is called a gap.