The word "deliberate" comes from the Latin word "deliberatus," which is derived from the verb "deliberare," meaning "to consider carefully."
nonchantical
Yes, "indeliberate" means not deliberate or intentional.
The root word of deliberation is "deliberate," which comes from the Latin word "deliberatus," meaning to weigh carefully.
She made a deliberate decision to resign from her job and pursue her passion for painting full-time.
The word "hasty" is never a verb. The noun is haste and the verb is to hasten. Deliberate and hasty as adjectives: "The change in location was a deliberate choice by the board, although they may have been too hasty in their decision." Hasty as an adjective and deliberate (consider, discuss, examine) as a verb: "The jury decided to deliberate rather than reach a hasty verdict."
The public humiliation by the teacher was deliberate.
It must have been a deliberate attepmt to ruin me.
Yojnaanusaar.
Intentional.
The man was charged with deliberate destruction of property.
The item was placed in a deliberate place so it became and obstical.
The word is spelled deliberate.
nonchantical
As an adjective - He made a deliberate mistake and cost us hundreds of dollars. As a verb - The jury will deliberate on the evidence and then give their verdict.
deliberate, planned, formal, premeditated
The deliberate killing of a monarch.
Opposite of expected would be unexpected, surprising. Opposite of deliberate would be accidental, randomly.