0 lack of ability to do something successfully or as it should be done:
Management have demonstrated almost unbelievable incompetence in their handling of the dispute.
allegations/accusations of incompetence
1 lack of the ability, skill, or knowledge that is needed to do a job or perform an action correctly or to a satisfactory standard:
to demonstrate/expose/reveal incompetence
gross/sheer/utter incompetence An audit reveals areas of gross incompetence and the mismanagement of the business.
administrative/bureaucratic/managerial incompetence
In all cases, these intifadat amounted to protests against social inequality, corruption, nepotism, authoritarianism, and the regime's incompetence.
Some pundits charged that the military's complete decay, especially the cowardice and incompetence of its commanders, had precipitated the debacle of 1847.
Congenital tricuspid incompetence simulating pulmonary atresia with intact ventricular septum, a report of two cases.
Yet linguistic incompetence hardly advances the linguistic turn.
An eight-year-old boy was known for many years to have mild congenital aortic incompetence.
This could be the consequence of turbulent flow at that site or, alternatively, to the presence of some degree of aortic incompetence in these cases.
We should resist the temptation to follow him, however misanthropic we may be, because human wickedness and incompetence without providence will produce only chaos.
Finally, anxiety in preadolescence was associated with developmental incompetence in adolescence.
中文繁体
無能力, 不勝任,不稱職…
More中文简体
无能力, 不胜任,不称职…
MoreEspañol
incompetencia, incompetencia [feminine], incapacidad [feminine]…
MorePortuguês
incompetência, incapacidade, inépcia…
More日本語
無能…
MoreFrançais
incompétence [feminine], incompétence…
MoreCatalan
incompetència…
Moreالعربية
عَجْز, نَقْص, عَدَم كَفاءة…
More