immeritorious

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

im- (un-”, “not) + meritorious (worthy or deserving of merit); compare the Latin immeritōrius

Pronunciation[edit]

Adjective[edit]

immeritorious (comparative more immeritorious, superlative most immeritorious)

  1. Unworthy of merit; not deserving of merit; not meritorious.
    • 1883, Mind, volume 8, B. Blackwell, page 24:
      Their acceptance indeed, as a formula, may show a willing and tractable spirit, and they may to that extent have a value : but such acceptance differs of course from belief in being admittedly a voluntary act, and not a mere immeritorious and reluctant yielding to the brute weight of evidence.
    • 2004: Damien Géradin, Modernisation and Enlargement: Two Major Challenges for EC Competition Law, page 137 (Intersentia; →ISBN, 9050954324)
      As long as the defence is credible and can be reasonably substantiated so that the counterclaim is not evidently immeritorious, the attacked party has little to lose, and may gain time.

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Related terms[edit]