Artificial intelligent assistant

improbate

I. ˈimprobate, a. Obs. rare—1.
    In 6 (Sc.) -at.
    [f. L. improbāt-us blamed, condemned, or L. improbus wicked: see -ate2.]
    Wicked.

1596 Dalrymple tr. Leslie's Hist. Scot. iv. 220 Throuch his awne exemple the improbat he teached.

II. improbate, v. Obs. rare—0.
    [f. L. improbāt-, ppl. stem of improbāre to disapprove, blame, condemn, reject, make void, f. im- (im-2) + probāre to make good, pronounce good, approve.]
    trans. To disapprove, disallow.

1656 Blount Glossogr., Improbate, to disallow, to dispraise, or dislike.

Oxford English Dictionary

yu7NTAkq2jTfdvEzudIdQgChiKuccveC 4932bc563213fa5b9c3386a858f2a64d