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malpractice
[mal-prak-tis]
noun
Law., failure of a professional person, as a physician or lawyer, to render proper services through reprehensible ignorance or negligence or through criminal intent, especially when injury or loss follows.
any improper, negligent practice; misconduct or misuse.
malpractice
/ ˌmælprækˈtɪʃənə, mælˈpræktɪs /
noun
immoral, illegal, or unethical professional conduct or neglect of professional duty
any instance of improper professional conduct
malpractice
Mistakes or negligent conduct by a professional person, especially a physician, that results in damage to others, such as misdiagnosis of a serious illness. Damaged parties often seek compensation by bringing malpractice suits against the offending physician or other professional.
Other Word Forms
- malpractitioner noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of malpractice1
Example Sentences
Those numbers show that, on the subject of Israel and Gaza, the DNC’s officers are guilty of political malpractice — and actively complicit with what most Democrats in the nation see as genocide.
Maybe this explains the creator’s choice to make the towering media malpractice that cemented Knox’s infamy a minor character as opposed to the acid geyser etching her supposed malice into our collective memory.
They need pitching depth, and it would be organizational malpractice not to get some by trading their pending free agents, Jansen included.
Martin Luther King replaced a county hospital that closed after losing national accreditation in 2005 because of serious medical malpractice, landing it the nickname “Killer King.”
A bombshell verdict by the Allahabad High Court had found Gandhi guilty of electoral malpractice and invalidated her 1971 election win.
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Related Words
- carelessness
- dereliction
- misbehavior
- misdeed
- mismanagement www.thesaurus.com
- negligence
- transgression
- violation
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