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Inadvertence   /ˌɪnədvˈərtəns/  /ˌɪnædvˈərtəns/   Listen
Inadvertence

noun
1.
An unintentional omission resulting from failure to notice something.  Synonym: oversight.
2.
The trait of forgetting or ignoring your responsibilities.  Synonyms: heedlessness, inadvertency, unmindfulness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Inadvertence" Quotes from Famous Books



... The music, too, did not displease her. At the Opera, the night before, she had arrived too early for the Russian Ballet, and found the stage occupied by singers, for a whole hour pale or apoplectic from terror lest by some dreadful inadvertence they might drop into a tune. Michael Mont was enraptured with the whole thing. And all three wondered what Fleur was thinking of it. But Fleur was not thinking of it. Her fixed idea stood on the stage and sang ...
— Forsyte Saga • John Galsworthy

... investigated the character of it, and if it was unmoved by the persuasive influence of "soft soap and sun," she added it to a list which meant knowledge. It is to be hoped that this was often considered an equivalent for the "trouncing" which was the common penalty of accident or inadvertence suffered by the Puritan child. In truth, Solomon's unwholesome caution, "Spare the rod and spoil the child," was all too strictly observed in those conscience-ridden Puritan days. I had a child's lively disapproval ...
— The Development of Embroidery in America • Candace Wheeler

... been confident that with him no such misstep was possible. He could not believe; a little while, and luck would turn, and up he would go again—higher than before. Many a lawyer—to look no farther than his own profession—had through recklessness or pride or inadvertence got the big men down on him. But after a time they had relented or had found an exact use for him; and fall had been succeeded by rise. Was there a single instance where a man of good brain had been permanently downed? No, not one. Stay—Some of these unfortunates had ...
— The Grain Of Dust - A Novel • David Graham Phillips

... with a smiling round face, one of the Cathedral Choristers, darted off to find Mrs. Daventry, the sister of "our Mrs. Leith"; Mr. Dickinson gently, but decisively, took the music case from Rosamund's hand with an "I'll carry that home for you"; a thin man, like an early primrose obliged by some inadvertence of spring to work for its living, sidled up and begged for the name of "your most beautiful and chaste second encore for our local paper, the 'Welsley Whisperer'"; and Mrs. Dickinson in a pearl gray shawl, with an artificial pink camellia carelessly entangled in her marvelously smooth ...
— In the Wilderness • Robert Hichens

... must drown my inadvertence in a glass of Sauterne with you. There is a set of gentlemen in your ...
— Crotchet Castle • Thomas Love Peacock


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