Beneath in a sentence as an adverb

I think it's more "beneath me" to sit on my *** all day being broke than it is to clean grease traps.

Whenever he's standing at the edge of the cliff, on the ground, the ground beneath his feet paws?

When I saw the "Secure beneath the watchful eyes" poster [1] I couldn't believe it wasn't satire.

But there was no higher-order conceptual thinking beneath the surface-- no "there" there.

There's absolutely nothing wrong with taking a job that you feel is "beneath you", while you look for something better.

If I called Dustin Curtis a fat elitist slob then maybe all of the disdain in the comments beneath me would be warranted.

Then after WW2, the Soviets again, keen to punish the Latvians for daring to "let" the **** war machine crush them beneath its jackboots.

And I'll smirk and think, "heh, he was way off," but beneath that cynicism, there's just a bit of regret that we just didn't actually evolve in that way.

This combined with large stands of farmland and no trees for windrows means wind blows right across the road and freezes the rain instantly, sometimes right beneath your tires.

People sit happily beneath a dirty tarp in a roadside food stand, enjoying Manchurian Gobi... sometimes 4 or 5 people sharing one bowl of the delicious spicy food.

Pardon my coarseness, but so many kids who start out their college career are little ***** who think they know everything about programming and that taking an introductory class is beneath them.

The cornerstone of romantic relationships is equal emotional investment, and the idea that beneath all the trappings, we're fundamentally all just people.

It's a crime that road/highway development rarely takes this into consideration, especially when some of the nicest trails I ride go alongside or beneath some of the busiest roads in my metropolitan area.

But they rarely go beneath the surface of a word's meaning and, in so limiting themselves, even leave the false impression that words mean only what the flattened, homogenized, "fast-food" version says they mean - that is, something not very interesting.

Even if your abstraction is say 90% efficient compared to programming directly to whatever lies beneath it, if youve got 10 layers of abstraction between the code youre writing in your end user application and the hardware youre ultimately talking to, the effect is to reduce performance by about 2/3.

Beneath definitions

adverb

in or to a place that is lower

See also: below