Langimage
English

irregularly-verified

|ir-reg-u-lar-ly-ver-i-fied|

C1

🇺🇸

/ɪˈrɛɡjələrli ˈvɛrəˌfaɪd/

🇬🇧

/ɪˈrɛɡjʊləli ˈvɛrɪfaɪd/

inconsistently confirmed

Etymology
Etymology Information

'irregularly-verified' originates from the combination of 'irregularly' and 'verified', where 'irregularly' means 'not regular' and 'verified' means 'confirmed as true or accurate'.

Historical Evolution

'Irregularly' comes from the Latin word 'irregularis', and 'verified' comes from the Latin word 'verificare'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'irregularly' meant 'not following a pattern', and 'verified' meant 'confirmed'. Together, they describe a confirmation process that lacks consistency.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

describes something that has been confirmed or validated in a non-standard or inconsistent manner.

The data was irregularly-verified, leading to questions about its accuracy.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/06/16 23:11