Yes, despite a widespread belief that irregardless is not a real word, it is in face a word- it's a combination of 'irrespective' and 'regardless.' It is recognized by the Merriam-Webster Dictionary and the Oxford English Dictionary.
"Palabra" is the Spanish word for "Word".
The Latin word for sustainability is the word sostenibilita. The Spanish word for this word is sostenibilidad and the German word is nachhaltigkeit.
The Latin for the word process is the word a liquid. The Spanish word for process is proceso and the German word is prozess.
Modo is the Kikuyu word for the English word person.
Moge is the Kikuyu word for the English word clever.
Irregardless is not an actual word. Regarless is the word you are looking for...in fact, irregardless is a double negative, so not a word x 2. "ir" means not "regard" means to make note of "less" means no more IRREGARDLESS =Not making note of, and it means no more.
"Irregardless of the weather, we will still have our picnic in the park."
No. The proper word is "regardless." See the Related Link.
A word that can be used for an antonym for the word although is irregardless.
There is no such standard word as irregardless... it is simply "regardless". The nonstandard word irregardless is redundant. The prefix ir- means not. People intend irregardless to mean without regard for some information, or without taking certain information into consideration. But it would really mean "Not [ir-] without regard" [regardless].When used, the word irregardless carries the unfortunate sense that an uninformed person is attempting to appear learned. Regardless of what others may say, avoid "irregardless". Ex: Regardless, Steve is A gay.
No. "Irregardless" is not a word. "Dictionaries that list the word "irregardless" list it as "non-standard." This means that they recognize the word has common use, but really isn't a proper word. So, you can use the word as it is a "real" word, recognized by dictionaries, but you would be much better off using the proper word, regardless of the "trendy kids."
"Irregardless" is considered a non-standard or colloquial term, often used in informal speech despite being technically incorrect. The correct term to use in its place is "regardless."
It is a casual,nonstandard phrase and is spelled irregardless
No, "irregardless" contains a double negative. "Regardless" is proper English, but "irregardless" is not.
Yes, "irregardless" is considered nonstandard and grammatically incorrect. The correct term is "regardless."
Irregardless is listed as an adverb, nonstandard.Please see the related link for further informaton:
"Regardless" is the correct term to use. "Irregardless" is considered nonstandard and is often criticized for being a double negative (combining "ir-" and "regardless").