1. moot - Noun
2. moot - Adjective
3. moot - Verb
5. moot - Adjective Satellite
See 1st Mot.
A ring for gauging wooden pins.
To argue for and against; to debate; to discuss; to propose for discussion.
Specifically: To discuss by way of exercise; to argue for practice; to propound and discuss in a mock court.
A meeting for discussion and deliberation; esp., a meeting of the people of a village or district, in Anglo-Saxon times, for the discussion and settlement of matters of common interest; -- usually in composition; as, folk-moot.
A discussion or debate; especially, a discussion of fictitious causes by way of practice.
Subject, or open, to argument or discussion; undecided; debatable; mooted.
of Mot
Source: Webster's dictionaryOne volcano in Hawaii, one volcano in Indonesia, produces enough gases in the atmosphere, which include those natural elements that are in the Earth's crust, that, uh, kind of make all the, you know, the science that we have about what we produce, moot. Jim Gibbons
For I am shave as neigh as any frere. But yit I praye unto youre curteisye: Beeth hevy again, or elles moot I die. Geoffrey Chaucer
Two forces are emerging that will moot global warming. First, the end of the population explosion will, over the decades, reduce the increases in demand for just about everything. Second, the increase in the cost of both finding and using hydrocarbons will increase the hunger for alternatives. George Friedman
Most good art is left wing. It's a moot point whether there is any good right-wing art. Samuel West
that is a moot question Source: Internet
They considered the possibility of a strike Source: Internet