[
UK
/ˌɪnɛkspˈiəɹɪənst/
]
[ US /ɪnɪkˈspɪɹiənst/ ]
[ US /ɪnɪkˈspɪɹiənst/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- lacking practical experience or training
How To Use inexperienced In A Sentence
- Practising lawyers find it harder to get trained staff and find less time to train inexperienced staff. Legal Education—For What?
- The rest were made up of inexperienced trainees and players carrying injuries after the cash-strapped club sold five players on transfer deadline day. The Sun
- Much of the management of these huge tasks was entrusted to young inexperienced Allied officers. The Collins History of the World in the 20th Century
- New, inexperienced members of staff are more liable to make errors of judgment.
- The changes are being made to address the rising death toll from crashes caused by inexperienced and reckless young drivers. Times, Sunday Times
- Inexperienced pilots of those gyroplanes should not fly in winds above 15 knots.
- A group of young, inexperienced Boy Scouts wanted to go CAMPING!
- The pole of a punt is a dangerous weapon in the hands of the inexperienced, and as such pleasure crafts journey too far into the path into the path of our rowing heroes ‘bumps’ literally will occur.
- I never hear of an inexperienced buyer in search of a rifle without being reminded of the purchaser of a telescope, who, on asking the optician, among a multitude of other questions, whether he would be able to discern an object through it four miles off, received for reply, 'See an object _four_ miles off, Sir? The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 61, November, 1862
- The inexperienced pilot flew the plane badly; it was off the beam most of the time.