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Synonyms

botched

American  
[bocht] / bɒtʃt /

adjective

  1. spoiled by poor or clumsy work; bungled.

    The teachers are up in arms about the botched rollout of the new standards, which caused unnecessary confusion and stress for them and their students.


verb

  1. the simple past tense and past participle of botch.

Other Word Forms

  • botchedly adverb

Etymology

Origin of botched

botch 1 ( def. ) + -ed 2 ( def. )

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Treebaun progressed quickly through each student’s recap and repercussion track, and I watched a botched Kennedy assassination simulation, a Watergate mess, and a rather iffy situation involving Ben Franklin, but none of them were Elliot’s.

From Literature

When Salmond died, aged 69, he had been suing the Scottish government over a botched investigation into harassment complaints made about him.

From BBC

A botched surgery onboard would raise questions of legal rights and compensation.

From The Wall Street Journal

Some home fans left Allianz Stadium early in the Ireland match, while fly-half George Ford was ironically cheered for finding touch after two earlier botched efforts.

From BBC

The Los Angeles County Fire Department oversaw the response of the Eaton fire, and it has come under intense scrutiny over the botched alerts and limited firefighting resources on the west side of town.

From Los Angeles Times