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Inept   /ɪnˈɛpt/   Listen
adjective
Inept  adj.  
1.
Not apt or fit; unfit; unsuitable; improper; unbecoming. "The Aristotelian philosophy is inept for new discoveries."
2.
Silly; useless; nonsensical; absurd; foolish. "To view attention as a special act of intelligence, and to distinguish it from consciousness, is utterly inept."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Inept" Quotes from Famous Books



... for contrary opinions; that, for what it is worth, let him proclaim. Be not afraid; although he be wrong, so also is the dead, stuffed Dagon he insults. For the voice of God, whatever it is, is not that stammering, inept tradition which the people holds. These truths survive in travesty, swamped in a world of spiritual darkness and confusion; and what a few comprehend and faithfully hold, the many, in their dead jargon, repeat, degrade, ...
— Lay Morals • Robert Louis Stevenson

... less." I quote the line from memory, perhaps incorrectly; if so, its author will, I feel sure, forgive the unintentional mangling. Did the laughter of the children grow less? Happily one can be quite sure it did not. So long as any inept draughtsman can scrawl a few lines which they accept as a symbol of an engine, an elephant or a pussy cat, so long will the great army of invaders who are our predestined conquerors be content to laugh anew ...
— Children's Books and Their Illustrators • Gleeson White

... exclaimed the doctor, confusing himself by an inept attempt at gallantry. "He shall stay as long as you please. But"—here the doctor became grave again—"you cannot too strongly urge upon him the importance of hard work at the present time, which may be said to be the turning-point of his career as a student. ...
— Cashel Byron's Profession • George Bernard Shaw

... it is physically impossible for him to escape, not because he is in the least unaware of his power or inept in using it. Apparently he has no illusions concerning man and no respect for him as a superior being. He has been beaten by superior cunning, but never conquered, and he gives no parole to refrain from renewing the contest ...
— Bears I Have Met--and Others • Allen Kelly

... Syrian and Greek; imbecile pedants, like the Agamemnon of the book, a rhetoric of artificial words. These people are depicted with swift strokes, wallowing around tables, exchanging stupid, drunken speech, uttering senile maxims and inept proverbs. ...
— Against The Grain • Joris-Karl Huysmans


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