It's the Word of the Day podcast for November 19th.
Today's word is moot.
Spelled M-O-O-T, moot is an adjective.
It typically describes something that is no longer important or worth discussing.
It can also describe something that is argued about but not possible for people to prove.
Here's the word used in a sentence from the Boston Globe.
Those concerns turned out to be moot,
with a largely stress-free second half as the Celtics lead ballooned to more than 20 points in the third quarter as the team never looked back.
To describe an argument as moot is to say that there's no point in discussing it further.
In other words,
a moot argument is one that has no practical or useful significance and is fit only for theoretical consideration,
as in a classroom.
It's no surprise, then, that the roots of moot are entwined with academia.
The adjective moot followed a few centuries behind the noun moot,
which comes from moat, an Old English word meaning assembly.
Originally, moot referred to an Anglo-Saxon deliberative assembly.
that met primarily for the administration of justice.
By the 16th century, functioning judicial moots had diminished, the only remnant being moot courts,
academic mock courts, in which law students could try hypothetical cases for practice.
The earliest use of moot as an adjective was as a synonym of the word debatable.