effectiveness
English
editEtymology
editPronunciation
edit- (weak vowel distinction) IPA(key): /ɪˈfɛk.tɪv.nɪs/
- (weak vowel merger) IPA(key): /əˈfɛk.tɪv.nəs/
Noun
editeffectiveness (countable and uncountable, plural effectivenesses)
- The property of being effective, of achieving results.
- The effectiveness of the drug was well established.
- The capacity or potential for achieving results.
- 2013 August 31, Jack L. Goldsmith, “What Happened to the Rule of Law?”, in New York Times:
- The problem with these precedents is that the Security Council did not authorize intervention in Syria, and an intervention there will thus harm, not help, the Council’s credibility and effectiveness.
- The degree to which something achieves results.
- He questioned the effectiveness of the treatment.
- 2013 September 1, Phil McNulty, BBC Sport[1]:
- United were having more possession but a sign of the effectiveness of Liverpool's defence was that it took the visitors 76 minutes to force Mignolet into serious action, when he dived to punch away a shot from substitute Nani.
Derived terms
editRelated terms
edit- effect
- effective
- effectivity
- effector
- effectual
- effectuate
- efficacious
- efficacity
- efficacy
- efficiency
- efficient
Translations
editproperty
|
capacity or potential
|
degree
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