0 not having the natural ability to be good at anything, or at a particular activity:
This is the sort of work an untalented apprentice might churn out.
The recipes look achievable for even the most untalented amateur cook.
For such an apparently untalented, unacademic and solitary boy, his career choice was limited.
She was considered relatively untalented by the diving coaches.
The show made incredibly ordinary, untalented and not very good-looking people suddenly very famous.
But talented individuals who affirm the difference principle will not be justified in demanding higher wages than the untalented.
The first objection focuses on how this kind of scheme allegedly affects the respective income-leisure trade-offs of the talented and the untalented.
Nor is it enough for him to show that one talented person would envy some untalented people under some circumstances in the labour auction.
Second, the untalented (who include those in the middle range) would envy the talented, who would have more choices, because of the lower premiums.