irrelevanceir‧rel‧e‧vance /ɪˈreləvəns/ AWL (also ir‧rel‧e‧van‧cy /-vənsi/) noun - Age is an irrelevance for most jobs.
- Meanwhile, three other candidates demonstrated for a national television audience their growing irrelevance to the struggle for the nomination.
- Moral philosophers often ignore empathy as though it were an irrelevance outside their province, a matter for psychology perhaps rather than philosophy.
- Pensions policy accompanied long-term labour-market trends, which increasingly confirmed the economic irrelevance of elderly workers.
- So, the political irrelevance of our subjects did not diminish our desperation.
- The irrelevance of such an attitude is obvious.
- What can I say in answer to this charge of irrelevance?
nounrelevance ≠ irrelevanceadjectiverelevant ≠ irrelevantadverbrelevantly ≠ irrelevantly