English Writing Tips | Part-3

Want to improve your English while learning to write? Here are some useful tips that will get you writing in English
Definition

Whether the chicken or the egg came first is a meaningless issue. This phrase has its roots in British law, where it was used to indicate a topic for debate during a moot, or student assembly, of lawyers. Its current meaning was being used more liberally by the early 1700s.

Examples

A moot point can be used to express three separate ideas:

  1. Moot point can be used as an adjective to denote a situation that is up for dispute but has no bearing on actual affairs. It can also indicate improbability or questionable.

Example: Since the deadline has passed, she no longer needs a reference letter for her application today.

  1. Moot point, when used as a verb, designates something as being irrelevant for practical reasons. However, the verb moot can also be used to introduce a subject that is up for additional discussion or debate. 

Example: Jane’s husband suggested that their family travels to Bermuda because they were in desperate need of a vacation.

  1. Moot point is a term that can be used to refer to "a disputable or unimportant subject’ and hence works as a noun. It also refers to a legal matter that, if explored or followed, would be unworkable, not crucial, speculative, or academic. 

Example: The detective's assumption of the suspect's motivation in the case was rendered irrelevant when the DNA test revealed the thief's genuine identity.