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competent
[kom-pi-tuhnt]
adjective
having suitable or sufficient skill, knowledge, experience, etc., for some purpose; properly qualified.
He is perfectly competent to manage the bank branch.
adequate but not exceptional.
Law., (of a witness, a party to a contract, etc.) having legal competence, as by meeting certain minimum requirements of age, soundness of mind, or the like.
Geology., (of a bed or stratum) able to undergo folding without flowage or change in thickness.
competent
/ ˈkɒmpɪtənt /
adjective
having sufficient skill, knowledge, etc; capable
suitable or sufficient for the purpose
a competent answer
law (of a witness) having legal capacity; qualified to testify, etc
belonging as a right; appropriate
Other Word Forms
- competently adverb
- noncompetent adjective
- ultracompetent adjective
- uncompetent adjective
- competentness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of competent1
Word History and Origins
Origin of competent1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The letter reflected on the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, pointing out that the storm had claimed more than 1,800 lives and had highlighted the need for competent American disaster-management leadership.
While signing an executive order to establish an Olympic task force, the president also took a swipe at Mayor Karen Bass, calling her “not very competent.”
Now, in the absence of more competent advisors, the president is indulging his most dangerous authoritarian impulses.
What he didn’t say was that the skepticism was promoted by Kennedy and other anti-vaxxers denigrating the technology; a competent and responsible NIH chief would be defending a technological innovation, not magnifying disinformation about it.
He said Salmond "had spent several years guiding SNP policy to form the basis of a credible case for independence on the back of having ran the most competent government in the history of Scotland".
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