Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Beneath

Beneath ({not transcribed}) , preposition

[Old English benethe, bineoeen, Anglo-Saxon beneoean, benyean; pref. be- + neoean, nyean, downward, beneath, akin to English nether. See Nether.]

1.
Lower in place, with something directly over or on; under; underneath; hence, at the foot of.
Beneath the mount. — Ex. xxxii. 19
Beneath a rude and nameless stone he lies. — Pope
2.
Under, in relation to something that is superior, or that oppresses or burdens.
Our country sinks beneath the yoke. — Shakespeare
3.
Lower in rank, dignity, or excellence than; as, brutes are beneath man; man is beneath angels in the scale of beings. Hence: Unworthy of; unbecoming.
He will do nothing that is beneath his high station. — Atterbury

Beneath ({not transcribed}) , adverb

1.
In a lower place; underneath.
The earth you take from beneath will be barren. — Mortimer
2.
Below, as opposed to heaven, or to any superior region or position; as, in earth beneath.