You searched for: “moot
moot (MOOT) (adjective), more moot, most moot
1. Descriptive of something that is debatable, not certain, questionable, or is totally insignificant: During a lecture, a student asked the professor a moot question regarding what was on the last test, which the other students considered to be inappropriate at that time.

When it started to rain, it became a moot decision as to where Jim and his family would have their picnic .

2. Etymology: originally in Anglo Saxon days, a moot point was one which was talked about at a "meeting" because "meeting" is the original sense of the noun moot, a town meeting for purposes of debating and discussing issues.
Compiled from information provided by John Ayto
in the Dictionary of Word Origins; Arcade Publishing;
New York; 1990; page 354.
Open to question and debatable.
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This entry is located in the following unit: English Words in Action, Group M (page 4)
moot (verb), moots; mooted; mooting
To present an idea or a topic for debate or discussion: The tax issues have been mooted in Congress and they will be points of arguments for a long time.
To argue and to debate for and against.
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Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
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This entry is located in the following units: Contranyms (page 1) English Words in Action, Group M (page 4)
To argue for something, or against it, with another person, or people, who are opposed to the issue. (1)
A reference to an issue that is debatable, uncertain, or questionable. (1)