inoperationEtymologyFrom Latin inoperari (“to effect”), from in- (“in”) + operari (“to operate”).inoperation means agency; influence; production of effects. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.nounagency; influence; production of effects“As no man can come to me but by the grace and lively inoperation of my Father, so none can attain to the perfect knowledge of the Father”Lack of operation or functioning; inactivity.“In the British Medical Journal of June 2nd we discussed briefly the question of universal compulsory notification, and instanced as an argument in favour of widening the scope of the general Act that its inoperation in certain districts was not to the advantage of those neighbouring localities in which the system is in force, inasmuch as disease not known in the place where notification was absent”