[
UK
/ˌɪnˈɛkspɜːt/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
lacking professional skill or expertise
inexpert but conscientious efforts
a very amateurish job
an unskilled painting
How To Use inexpert In A Sentence
- He was too inexperienced and too inexpert to succeed.
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- I'm especially concerned about the mentally ill, those whose disabilities may not be quantifiable or tangible to jaded health reviewers too inexpert or insensitive to accept what they don't understand.
- I felt real pity for Suchet, deploying his talent against such inexpert cast mates.
- But the expertise of bureaucrats makes it harder for inexpert politicians to hold them to account.
- Giambrone confirms that the team sought ceramics that ‘looked good’ to their eyes - eyes, like those of the audience to whom they pitched, that were unabashedly inexpert.
- Here was the inexpert coffee maker -- he had watched Maria and knew all about it now. THE INNOCENT
- His talk is of pack-asses, smiths, cobblers, and tanners, and he seems always to be using the same terms for the same things; so that anyone inexpert and thoughtless might laugh his speeches to scorn.
- She felt silly and uncomfortable sat next to the silent man, but most of all she felt like a child, unversed and inexpert at speaking to adults and looked down at her hands awkwardly, trying to banish the unsettling feeling.
- Mike pushed his way through the crowd, dekeing out the gawking barricades with daring sidesteps and inexpert but effective shoulder-blocks.