Langimage
English

randomly-evaluated

|ran-dom-ly-e-val-u-at-ed|

C1

/ˈrændəmli ɪˈvæljueɪtɪd/

unsystematic assessment

Etymology
Etymology Information

'randomly-evaluated' originates from the combination of 'randomly' and 'evaluated'. 'Randomly' comes from 'random', which has roots in Old French 'randir', meaning 'to gallop', and 'evaluated' comes from 'evaluate', which originates from Latin 'ex-' meaning 'out' and 'valere' meaning 'to be worth'.

Historical Evolution

'Randomly' evolved from the Old French 'randir', and 'evaluate' from Latin 'ex-' and 'valere', eventually forming the modern English term 'randomly-evaluated'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'randomly' meant 'without a specific pattern', and 'evaluate' meant 'to assess worth'. Together, they imply an assessment done without a specific pattern.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

assessed or judged without a specific pattern or order, often implying a lack of systematic approach.

The results were randomly-evaluated, leading to inconsistent conclusions.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/05/23 15:06