negligence
See also: négligence
English
Etymology
From Middle English necligence, negligence, from Old French negligence, from Latin neglegentia.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈnɛɡlɪd͡ʒəns/
- Hyphenation: neg‧li‧gence
Noun
negligence (usually uncountable, plural negligences)
- The state of being negligent.
- negligence while driving
- 1946 January and February, T. S. Lascelles, “A Series of False Signals”, in Railway Magazine, page 43:
- The Woodwalton signalman, Rose, who was severely censured in Captain Tyler's report, behaved with great negligence.
- (law, singular only) The tort whereby a duty of reasonable care was breached, causing damage: any conduct short of intentional or reckless action that falls below the legal standard for preventing unreasonable injury.
- (law, uncountable) The breach of a duty of care: the failure to exercise a standard of care that a reasonable person would have in a similar situation.
Usage notes
- The breach of a duty of care is one element of the tort of negligence, but is also called negligence; one must therefore take care to clarify what is meant.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
state of being negligent
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law: failure to exercise a standard of care (law)
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Further reading
negligence on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Middle French
Descendants
- French: négligence
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