defective
adjective
- flawed
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /dɪˈfɛktɪv/
adj
Etymology: From Middle English defectif, defective, from Old French defectif, from Late Latin dēfectīvus.
- Having one or more defects.
“It is likely that the long evolutionary trajectory of Mycoplasma went from a reductive autotroph to oxidative heterotroph to a cell-wall–defective degenerate parasite. This evolutionary trajectory assumes the simplicity to complexity route of biogenesis, a point of view that is not universally accepted.”
- Lacking some forms; e.g., having only one tense or being usable only in the third person.
- Having a root whose final consonant is weak (ي, و, or ء).
- Not capable of representing all the phonemic distinctions of a language it is used to write.
- Spelled without matres lectionis, for example אמץ (ómets, “courage”) as opposed to the plene spelling אומץ where the letter vav ⟨ו⟩ indicates the vowel o.
adv
Etymology: From Middle English defectif, defective, from Old French defectif, from Late Latin dēfectīvus.
- Without matres lectionis (letters indicating vowels) written out.
“For the sake of comparison, note the distribution of these spellings in some other Hebrew sources: in the MT the vowel o after the first consonant of the root is written defective in approximately 3,600 cases as against 850 cases of plene spelling.”
noun
Etymology: From Middle English defectif, defective, from Old French defectif, from Late Latin dēfectīvus.
- A person or thing considered to be defective.
“It is an offence, subject to the exception mentioned in this section, for a person to procure a woman who is a defective to have unlawful sexual intercourse in any part of the world.”
“There were many more kinds of mental institutions at mid-century, ones for "mental defectives and epileptics" and the mentally retarded, psychiatric wards in veterans hospitals, as well as "psychopathic" and private mental hospitals.”
- A word written without matres lectionis (letters indicating vowels).
“Thus, in the Pentateuch and in the earlier prophets the plenes are counted, whilst in the later prophets the defectives are enumerated.”