| 释义 | com·pe·tent I. \-nt\ adjective
 Etymology: Middle English, suitable, appropriate, from Middle French & Latin; Middle French compétent, from Latin competent-, competens
 1.
 a.
 (1)  : possessed of or characterized by marked or sufficient aptitude, skill, strength, or knowledge : satisfactory, adequate
 < was generally considered a competent painter of landscapes >
 (2)  : sufficient
 < a competent income >
 b.  : satisfactorily or moderately able : without marked weakness or demerit
 < one way toward the competent and salable, the other toward excellent and possibly unsalable — H.S.Canby >
 c.  : possessed of knowledge, judgment, strength, or skill needed to perform an indicated action — followed by an infinitive phrase
 < one of the finest raiders alive, and most competent to judge my half-formed scheme — T.E.Lawrence >
 2.
 a. archaic  : appropriate or suitable especially to a certain social position or rank
 < a moiety competent was gaged by our king — Shakespeare >
 b.  : proper or rightly pertinent : rightfully belonging or exercised
 < if it be competent for our government to segregate and impound one group of law-abiding innocent citizens — A.J.Nock >
 3. geology, of a bed or stratum  : strong enough to transmit effectively the thrust when strata are folded by lateral compression and capable of sustaining the weight of overlying strata when arched into an anticline
 4.  : legally qualified or capable: as
 a.  : authorized to act or possessed of jurisdiction
 < a competent court >
 < a competent judge >
 b.  : legally qualified in mental and physical makeup
 < a competent witness >
 c.  : meeting legal requirements as to validity
 < competent evidence >
 5. biology  : exhibiting competence : functional
 Synonyms: see able, sufficient
 II. adjective
 : having the capacity to respond (as by producing an antibody) to an antigenic determinant
 < immunologically competent cells >
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