moot: [OE] Etymologically, a ‘moot point’ is one talked about at a ‘meeting’. For ‘meeting’ is the original sense of the noun moot – particularly as applied in early medieval England to a meeting functioning as a court of law. The word goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *mōtam ‘meeting’, source also of English meet. Its modern adjectival usage seems to have emerged in the 16th century. The derived verb moot goes back to Old English times (mōtian ‘converse, plead in court’), but again its present-day use, for ‘suggest, propose’, is a more recent development, dating from the 17th century. => meet
moot (n.)
"assembly of freemen," mid-12c., from Old English gemot "meeting" (especially of freemen, to discuss community affairs or mete justice), "society, assembly, council," from Proto-Germanic *ga-motan (compare Old Low Frankish muot "encounter," Middle Dutch moet, Middle High German muoz), from collective prefix *ga- + *motan (see meet (v.)).
moot (adj.)
"debatable; not worth considering" from moot case, earlier simply moot (n.) "discussion of a hypothetical law case" (1530s), in law student jargon. The reference is to students gathering to test their skills in mock cases.
moot (v.)
"to debate," Old English motian "to meet, talk, discuss," from mot (see moot (n.)). Related: Mooted; mooting.
双语例句
1. How long he'll be able to do so is a moot point.
不知道他还能这样做多久。
来自柯林斯例句
2. He argued that the issue had become moot since the board had changed its policy.
他争辩说这项议题已变得毫无实际意义,因为董事会已经改变了政策。
来自《权威词典》
3. The oil versus nuclear equation is largely moot.
石油和核能之间的关系还很有争议.
来自辞典例句
4. Since the accusedis already in custody, I assumebail is moot?
已经被告已经被在押我推测保释有待讨论?
来自电影对白
5. The question mooted in the board meeting is still a moot point.