immature - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle French immature. Partially displaced unripe, from Old English unrīpe (“unripe, immature”).
immature (comparative more immature, superlative most immature)
- (now rare) Occurring before the proper time; untimely, premature (especially of death). [from 16th c.]
- Not fully formed or developed; not grown. [from 17th c.]
- Childish in behavior; juvenile. [from 20th c.]
You're only young once, but you can be immature the rest of your life.
The man was immature for throwing a tantrum.
- Wilhelm Stekel - As quoted in The Catcher in the Rye (1951) by J. D. Salinger.
The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of a mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one.
- Synonyms: infantile, milky; see also Thesaurus:childish
not fully formed
- Armenian: խակ (hy) (xak)
- Assamese: কুমলীয়া (kumolia), আপঁইতা (apõita)
- Azerbaijani: qeyri-kamil
- Bulgarian: незрял (bg) (nezrjal), недоразвит (bg) (nedorazvit)
- Catalan: immadur (ca)
- Chinese:
- Finnish: epäkypsä (fi)
- French: immature (fr), (fruit) vert (fr)
- German: unreif (de)
- Greek: ανώριμος (el) (anórimos)
- Italian: immaturo (it), acerbo (it)
- Japanese: 未熟な (ja) (mijuku na)
- Korean: 미성숙하다 (miseongsuk-hada)
- Latin: immātūrus
- Macedonian: не́зрел (nézrel), недо́раснат (nedórasnat)
- Manx: anappee, neuappee
- Maori: kānewha, pangore, waitau, kōpīpī, kopī
- Norwegian:
- Old English: unrīpe
- Polish: niedojrzały (pl) m
- Portuguese: imaturo (pt)
- Romanian: imatur (ro)
- Russian: неспе́лый (ru) (nespélyj), незре́лый (ru) (nezrélyj)
- Slovene: nezrel
- Spanish: inmaturo
- Swedish: omogen (sv)
childish
- Albanian: buzëqumësht (sq)
- Armenian: խակ (hy) (xak)
- Bulgarian: детински (bg) (detinski)
- Catalan: immadur (ca)
- Chinese:
- Czech: nedospělý, nezralý
- Danish: umoden, infantil
- Finnish: lapsellinen (fi)
- French: immature (fr)
- German: unreif (de), kindisch (de)
- Greek: ανώριμος (el) (anórimos), άπλερος (el) m (ápleros)
- Italian: immaturo (it), infantile (it)
- Japanese: 大人げない (おとなげない, otonagenai), 未熟 (ja) (みじゅく, mijuku)
- Korean: 유치하다 (ko) (yuchi-hada)
- Macedonian: де́тински (détinski), де́тинест (détinest)
- Maori: pangore
- Norwegian:
- Old English: unrīpe
- Polish: niedojrzały (pl)
- Portuguese: imaturo (pt), infantil (pt)
- Romanian: imatur (ro)
- Russian: незре́лый (ru) (nezrélyj)
- Sassarese: zèivu
- Slovene: nezrel
- Spanish: inmaduro (es), aniñado (es), pueril (es), infantil (es)
- Swedish: omogen (sv)
- Tamil: குழந்தைத்தனமான (kuḻantaittaṉamāṉa)
immature (plural immatures)
- An immature member of a species.
2001, DE Walter, H Proctor, RA Norton, Acarology: Proceedings of the 10th International Congress, →ISBN, page 51:
There are many genera and even families of Brachypylina for which immatures are not yet known, and thus numerous examples of adult convergence and misclassification remain to be revealed: such is the case with Hypozetes.
2005, Sean Dooley, The Big Twitch, Sydney: Allen and Unwin, page 240:
While on a walk the next morning I found what looked like a patch of old growth habitat - perhaps somewhere the fires had missed - and to my astonishment saw a female Red-lored Whistler accompanied by an immature.
Borrowed from Latin immātūrus.
immature (plural immatures)
- “immature”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
immature
- inflection of immatur:
immature
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /im.maːˈtuː.re/, [ɪmːäːˈt̪uːrɛ]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /im.maˈtu.re/, [imːäˈt̪uːre]
immātūre
- “immature”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- immature in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.