Ignoramus Definition

ĭgnə-rāməs
ignoramuses
noun
ignoramuses
An ignorant and stupid person.
Webster's New World

(law, dated) A grand jury's ruling on an indictment when the evidence is determined to be insufficient to send the case to trial.

Wiktionary

Other Word Forms of Ignoramus

Noun

Singular:
ignoramus
Plural:
ignoramuses

Origin of Ignoramus

  • After the ignorant lawyer Ignoramus, the titular character in the 1615 play Ignoramus by the English playwright Georges Ruggle; from Latin ignōrāmus (“we do not know, we are ignorant of”), the first-person plural present active indicative of īgnōrō (“I do not know, I am unacquainted with, I am ignorant of”).

    From Wiktionary

  • From New Latin ignōrāmus a grand jury's endorsement upon a bill of indictment when evidence is deemed insufficient to send the case to a trial jury from Latin we do not know first person pl. present tense of ignōrāre to be ignorant ignore

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

  • Directly from Latin ignōrāmus (“we do not know”).

    From Wiktionary

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