moot point - meaning and definition. What is moot point
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What (who) is moot point - definition

LEGAL TERM ON THE STATUS OF A MATTER
Mootness (law); Moot point; Capable of repetition, yet evading review; Capable of repetition yet evading review; Moot (law); Moote point; Mootness in the United States; Voluntary cessation; Moot question

moot point         
HEADLAND
Moot Point
n. 1) a legal question which no court has decided, so it is still debatable or unsettled. 2) an issue only of academic interest. See also: moot
Redondo Point         
HEADLAND
Moot Point
Redondo Point () is a small point just west of Blanchard Ridge on the west coast of Graham Land. The Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) has approved Redondo (round) for this point on the basis of prior naming on an Argentine chart of 1957.
WTO/FTA Moot         
WTO-FTA Moot
The WTO-FTA Moot or Asian WTO Moot is an annual international moot court competition that began in 2010. Hosted in Seoul, the competition is sponsored by the South Korean Ministry of Trade, Energy, and Trade and the Korean Society of International Economic Law.

Wikipedia

Mootness

The terms moot, mootness and moot point are used in both in English and American law, although with different meanings.

In the legal system of the United States, a matter is "moot" if further legal proceedings with regard to it can have no effect, or events have placed it beyond the reach of the law. Thereby the matter has been deprived of practical significance or rendered purely academic. The U.S. development of this word stems from the practice of moot courts, in which hypothetical or fictional cases were argued as a part of legal education. These purely academic issues led the U.S. courts to describe cases where developing circumstances made any judgment ineffective as "moot". The doctrine can be compared to the ripeness doctrine, another judge-made rule, that holds that judges should not rule on cases based entirely on anticipated disputes or hypothetical facts. Similar doctrines prevent the federal courts of the United States from issuing advisory opinions.

This is different from the usage in the British legal system, where the term "moot" has the meaning of "remains open to debate" or unresolved. The shift in usage was first observed in the United States and the extent to which the term is used in U.S. jurisprudence and therefore the meaning attached to it has had the effect that it is rarely if ever used in a British courtroom. It should not be confused with the term "moot court", which refers to practice appellate arguments.

Examples of use of moot point
1. How widespread Hirsch‘s positional goods are is a moot point.
2. Its inauguration was a major moot point for the West.
3. Whether digital radio will – in its present form – is a moot point.
4. "This is a moot point because we did not know," he said.
5. But whether the bill is quite the "critical" moment Mr Blair pretended remains a moot point.