an inapt but well-meaning attempt to inject some humor into the proceedings
a recruit who was utterly inapt for most soldierly duties, so he spent most of his time playing in the army band
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To have the dissenters hearken back to the 19th century and discourse about voting customs then was inapt, and the justice called them on it.—
John E. Jones Iii,
The Conversation,
1 July 2026 Those are harsh analogies but not wholly inapt ones.—
Phil Plait,
Scientific American,
1 May 2026 The small, poor European countries without much need for national defense and with mostly homogeneous populations are inapt comparisons for the huge, sprawling, wildly diverse, rich and powerful United States.—
Chris Stirewalt,
The Hill,
10 Apr. 2026 If the codes don’t do this, or do this poorly, the remainder of any statistical analysis is rendered inapt and misleading.—
Lance Eliot,
Forbes.com,
25 Mar. 2026 As should be clear from Carr’s manifestly inapt use of those labels, his agenda goes far beyond enforcing any particular FCC rule.—
Jacob Sullum,
Oc Register,
24 Mar. 2026 The precedent is inapt, not least because the media landscape then was different with far fewer news sources.—
The Wall Street Journal,
Twin Cities,
25 July 2025 Beyond the application of arguably inapt legal and regulatory standards, technical and operational challenges may likewise hinder deAI adoption.—
Charlyn Ho,
Forbes,
15 Mar. 2025