Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Moot is its own antonym as well. ixfpr jwcrs Says:
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Moot is defined as follows from Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary:
We’ve Found Summer! 2008
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For those who are less avid “Law & Order” fans and missed the show, detectives first suspect a deranged student, but it turns out the blogger, called Moot, is a teacher who had been sent to a rubber room after he was falsely accused of molesting a student.
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On the south of the common, near the station, stood a red-brick building called the Moot Hall, which was a kind of church for the very undevout population.
Mr. Standfast John Buchan 1907
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It is a drama, and was acted several times -- first, in 1535, at Cupar-Fife, on a large green mound called Moot-hill; then, in 1539, in an open park near
Specimens with Memoirs of the Less-known British Poets, Complete George Gilfillan 1845
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It is a drama, and was acted several times -- first, in 1535, at Cupar-Fife, on a large green mound called Moot-hill; then, in 1539, in an open park near
Specimens with Memoirs of the Less-known British Poets, Volume 1 George Gilfillan 1845
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While studying law at the University of Toronto, Paul Alexander participated in mock-trial competitions called Moot court.
Thestar.com - Home Page John Goddard 2010
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Described by the TED website as the "last major enclave of the untamed Internet," the site is the creation of Christopher "Moot" Poole, one of the speakers at this year's TED conference.
Youth Radio -- Youth Media International: Privacy Wars III: The Moot Point [lol] 2010
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Described by the TED website as the "last major enclave of the untamed Internet," the site is the creation of Christopher "Moot" Poole, one of the speakers at this year's TED conference.
Youth Radio -- Youth Media International: Privacy Wars III: The Moot Point [lol] 2010
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"Moot" in the legal sense means that the case is "without legal significance, through having been previously decided or settled".
Archive 2006-10-01 Ellen Beth Gill 2006
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