inefficient
Frequently Asked Questions
- Machines, such as a gas-guzzling car or an old washing machine that uses up a lot of energy. Rube Goldberg machines are intentionally inefficient and overly complicated.
- People, such as a worker who completes tasks in roundabout ways or a runner who exerts unnecessary energy during each stride.
- Processes, such as a project that uses more of the budget than it needs to or involves more employees than is necessary.
- Institutions and organizations. People often accuse the government of being inefficient. An inefficient business is one that uses more resources than are necessary to operate.
- Without my monitor and mouse, I can still get work done, but I’m really inefficient—it takes me an hour to do what usually takes 10 minutes!
- Some people say that the government is too inefficient and should be run like a business.
- My car is so inefficient—it only gets 8 miles to the gallon.
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
By eschewing inefficient long twos, Curry and Harden became the two most lethal scorers in the NBA.
“The Navy’s public shipyards have been terrible at the management process in general and they’re extremely inefficient,” Clark said.
“This approach is also inefficient—we have an abundance of data that antibody responses are an excellent proxy measure for vaccine effectiveness against disease.”
From Salon
“We could make a case that the capital structure is inefficient,” they say.
These would be extremely inefficient, he points out, in comparison to heat pumps and electrification.
From BBC
From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.