Whether or not he intended to cause problems is immaterial. The fact that she is a woman is immaterial and irrelevant.
Recent Examples on the WebWhether a decision was made by Roberts or the front office will be immaterial. Dylan Hernández, Los Angeles Times, 8 Sep. 2022 The fact that Kirby wrote comic books and put this line in the mouth of a Ninja Turtle is immaterial. Jason O'bryan, Robb Report, 20 Aug. 2022 The end point is immaterial in Peele’s twisted jamboree of nightmares; the magic manifests en route.Wired, 28 July 2022 The Russian operations of many companies were so small that the cost of abandoning them would be immaterial. Geoff Colvin, Fortune, 27 July 2022 There’s almost no way in the late 1990s or early 2000s, to imagine a future where Yahoo was immaterial. Shannon Liao, Washington Post, 18 July 2022 Fair enough–but completely immaterial to the parameters and potential of the actual technology. Miller Whitehouse-levine, Fortune, 6 July 2022 The ongoing Russia-Ukraine war is likely to have a minimal impact on Linde, with Russia accounting for around 1% of total sales while the sales in Ukraine are immaterial. Trefis Team, Forbes, 7 June 2022 Biden's support for changes to the filibuster in the 50-50 Senate may ultimately be immaterial. Chris Megerian, Chron, 30 June 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Middle English immaterial, from Late Latin immaterialis, from Latin in- + Late Latin materialis material
VERBS | ADVERB | PREPOSITIONVERBS➤be, prove, seem不重要;證明無足輕重;似乎無關緊要▸➤become變得無關緊要ADVERB➤completely, entirely, quite, wholly完全不重要;無足輕重◇The condition of the car is quite immaterial as long as it works.這車只要能開就行,車況如何無所謂。➤almost幾乎無足輕重▸➤relatively相對不重要PREPOSITION➤to對⋯不重要◇These facts are immaterial to the problem.這些事實對這個問題無關緊要。