- adjectivemoot (adjective)
- subject to debate, dispute, or uncertainty:"whether they had been successful or not was a moot point" · "it is a moot point whether such a controversial scheme would have succeeded"
- having little or no practical relevance, typically because the subject is too uncertain to allow a decision:"the whole matter is becoming increasingly moot"
verbmoot (verb) · moots (third person present) · mooted (past tense) · mooted (past participle) · mooting (present participle)- raise (a question or topic) for discussion; suggest (an idea or possibility):"Sylvia needed a vacation, and a trip to Ireland had been mooted"
nounmoot (noun) · moots (plural noun)- historicalan assembly held for debate, especially in Anglo-Saxon and medieval times.
- a regular gathering of people having a common interest.
- lawa mock trial set up to examine a hypothetical case as an academic exercise:"the object of a moot is to provide practice in developing an argument"
OriginOld English mōt ‘assembly or meeting’ and mōtian ‘to converse’, of Germanic origin; related to meet. The adjective (originally an attributive noun use: see moot court) dates from the mid 16th century; the current verb sense dates from the mid 17th century.Similar and Opposite Wordsadjective
Bokep
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