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adj

moot

moot
adj
1
Open to debate; not settled, or (especially in American English) no longer having any practical importance.
"Whether the plan would have worked is now a moot point since it was cancelled."
"The question became moot once the company closed down."
noun
1
A practice legal case argued by law students for training purposes.
"She argued both sides of the case in a law school moot."
verb
1
To raise a subject for discussion.
"He mooted the idea of working from home permanently."

How to Use Moot

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishAs an adjective, "debatable" (UK) or "no longer relevant" (US); as a verb, to bring something up for discussion.

UK vs US

In British English "moot point" usually means genuinely open to debate; in American English it more often means the point no longer matters.

Common pairings
a moot point moot the idea moot court

Word Forms

more moot comparative, mooted past tense, mooted past tense, moots plural, moots plural, moots plural, moots plural, moots plural, moots singular, moots singular, most moot superlative

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Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

Whether the plan would have worked is now a _____ point since it was cancelled.

Etymology

From Old English (ge)mōt, meaning a formal meeting or assembly — the same root as "meet."

Rhymes for moot

See all rhymes for moot →
Definitions: FreeDict original editorial