hold cheap
English
Verb
hold cheap (third-person singular simple present holds cheap, present participle holding cheap, simple past and past participle held cheap)
- (transitive) To have a low esteem for (someone or something); to hold in contempt; to look down upon.
- 1927, Countee Cullen, “From the Dark Tower”, in Copper Sun, New York, N.Y.; London: Harper & Brothers, OCLC 7850600, part 1 (Color); republished in James Weldon Johnson, editor, The Book of American Negro Poetry […], revised edition, New York, N.Y.: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1931, OCLC 1298800855, page 228:
- We shall not always plant while others reap / The golden increment of bursting fruit, / Not always countenance, abject and mute / That lesser men should hold their brothers cheap; […]
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Translations
to have a low esteem for (someone or something) — See also translations at look down upon
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