Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

inefficient

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads
See also: inefficiënt

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Etymology

From in- + efficient.

Pronunciation

Adjective

inefficient (comparative more inefficient, superlative most inefficient)

  1. Not efficient; not producing the effect intended or desired; inefficacious.
    Celery is an inefficient food.
  2. Incapable of, or indisposed to, effective action; habitually slack or unproductive; effecting little or nothing.
    inefficient workers
    an inefficient administrator
    Jessica was terribly inefficient at cleaning, so her brother usually had to clean the whole room.
    • 1987 January 17, Ronald Reagan, Presidential Radio Address:
      The Defense Department, for example, has greatly expanded competitive bidding and is this year submitting to Congress the first-ever 2-year defense budget to replace the old, inefficient, year-by-year process.
    • 2007 October 13, Will Hutton, “Will China's next leader be its Gorbachev?”, in The Observer, →ISSN, archived from the original on 9 January 2025:
      [Gorbachev] did not champion perestroika and glasnost alone; much of the nomenklatura had decided that the Soviet economic and social model was dysfunctional, corrupt and endemically inefficient and had to change.

Antonyms

Derived terms

Translations

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

Noun

inefficient (plural inefficients)

  1. A person who cannot or does not work efficiently.
    • 1889, New York (State). Dept. of Labor. Bureau of Statistics, Annual Report (part 2, page 127)
      Two men were put to work who could not set their looms; a third man was taken on who helped the inefficients to set the looms. The other weavers thought this was a breach of their union rules and 18 of them struck []
    • 1903, Jack London, The People of the Abyss, Chapter 17:
      A general shaking up of the workers from top to bottom would result; and when equilibrium had been restored, the number of the inefficients at the bottom of the Abyss would have been increased by hundreds of thousands.
Remove ads

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads