impropriety
/ˌɪm.pɹəˈpɹaɪ.ɪ.ti/
ɪm · PɹƏPɹAꞮ · ɪ · ti (4 syllables)
English
Noun Top 39,397
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Definition
The condition of being improper.
Etymology
From French impropriété, from Latin improprietās. By surface analysis, improper + -iety or im- + propriety.
Example Sentences
- "If so many ladies of rank wrote books, there could be no impropriety in her following their example,..."
- "To see the impropriety of this noninformative prior, note that the posterior results (2.19)–(2.22) can be justified by as [sic] combining the likelihood function with the following ‘prior density’: […]"
- "Bayh and his supporters ended up maintaining that it was no longer sufficient that a nominee had not engaged in any impropriety; now there must be no "appearance" of impropriety. Thus opponents of a nominee could raise an "appearance" of impropriety by false charges and thereby defeat him. It was a vicious circle: the nominee would not be condemned for what he had done but for what he had been accused of having done by his detractors."
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