different between incompetent vs palooka

incompetent

English

Etymology

From French incompétent, from Late Latin incompetentem, from Latin incompet?ns.

Adjective

incompetent (comparative more incompetent, superlative most incompetent)

  1. Unskilled; lacking the degree of ability that would normally be expected.
    Synonym: inept
    Having an incompetent lawyer may be grounds for a retrial, but the lawyer in question probably doesn't know that.
  2. Unable to make rational decisions, insane or otherwise cognitively impaired.
    The charged was judged incompetent to stand trial, at least until his medication started working.
  3. (medicine) Of the cervix: opening too early in pregnancy, provoking the baby to be born.
  4. (geology) Not resistant to deformation or flow.

Synonyms

  • See also Thesaurus:bad

Derived terms

  • incompetently

Related terms

  • incompetence
  • incompetency

Translations

Noun

incompetent (plural incompetents)

  1. A person who is incompetent.

Catalan

Etymology

From Latin incompet?ns, attested from 1696.

Adjective

incompetent (masculine and feminine plural incompetents)

  1. incompetent
    Antonym: competent

Related terms

  • incompetència

References

Further reading

  • “incompetent” in Diccionari de la llengua catalana, segona edició, Institut d’Estudis Catalans.
  • “incompetent” in Diccionari normatiu valencià, Acadèmia Valenciana de la Llengua.
  • “incompetent” in Diccionari català-valencià-balear, Antoni Maria Alcover and Francesc de Borja Moll, 1962.

Dutch

Etymology

Likely borrowed, ultimately from Latin incompet?ns. Equivalent to in- +? competent.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???.k?m.p??t?nt/
  • Hyphenation: in?com?pe?tent
  • Rhymes: -?nt

Adjective

incompetent (comparative incompetenter, superlative incompetentst)

  1. incompetent

Inflection

Related terms

  • incompetentie

Occitan

Etymology

From Latin incompet?ns.

Adjective

incompetent m (feminine singular incompetenta, masculine plural incompetents, feminine plural incompetentas)

  1. incompetent
    Antonym: competent

Related terms

  • incompeténcia

Romanian

Etymology

From French incompétent

Adjective

incompetent m or n (feminine singular incompetent?, masculine plural incompeten?i, feminine and neuter plural incompetente)

  1. incompetent

Declension

incompetent From the web:

  • what incompetent mean
  • what's incompetent cervix
  • incompetent person meaning
  • what incompetent means in spanish
  • what incompetent person
  • what incompetent to stand trial
  • what's incompetent in german
  • incompetent what does it means


palooka

English

Etymology

Used in the US since the 1920s, originally primarily of boxers. Popularized by Jack Conway of Variety, who also popularized baloney and bimbo. Further popularized by Ham Fisher in his comic strip Joe Palooka, about a boxer (published in newspapers since 1930, particularly popular in 1940s).

Pronunciation

Noun

palooka (plural palookas)

  1. (US slang) A stupid, oafish or clumsy person.
  2. (US, boxing, bridge and similar ventures) Someone incompetent or untalented.
    • 1923, Lincoln Star, Nebraska, March 1923:
      But [Jack] Dempsey against some palooka who had been press agented into greatness and into the form of a Dempsey menace — that would pack any outdoor arena.

Derived terms

  • Palookaville

Translations

See also

  • tomato can

References

palooka From the web:

  • what palooka mean
  • palooka what does that mean
  • what does palooka mean in pulp fiction
  • what is palooka slang for
  • what does palookaville meaning
  • what does palooka mean in italian
  • what does palooka
  • what does palooza mean
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