adjective
ineffective
ihn-ih-FEHK-tihv
adjective
1
Not producing the result you want or need.
"The new painkiller proved ineffective against her migraines."
"Their marketing campaign was expensive but largely ineffective."
2
Not capable of doing a job well; incompetent.
"He was an ineffective manager who struggled to motivate his team."
How to Use Ineffective
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishSomething that just doesn't work or doesn't get results.
Common mistake
Easy to mix up with inefficient (wastes time/resources even if it works) — ineffective means it simply doesn't achieve the goal at all.
Easily confused with
Common pairings
proved ineffective
largely ineffective
ineffective treatment
Word Forms
more ineffective comparative, most ineffective superlative
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The new painkiller proved _____ against her migraines.
Etymology
From in- ("not") + effective, itself from Latin efficere, "to accomplish."