No, I did not mean moot, I meant Mute. I know the difference between the 2 words.
Dude, I was just trying to help you out, but you got defensive. I can't let it slide now lol.
According to yourself you don't know the difference between the two. You MAY have had a case if you didn't further explain yourself. Let me refresh your memory. You said:
"Its a Mute point. We've all argued/debated over these kind of topics time and time again to no avail."
"...to no avail." meaning the issue is unresolved. Correct?
“Moot” is a very old word related to “meeting,” specifically a meeting where serious matters are discussed. Oddly enough, a moot point can be a point worth discussing at a meeting (or in court)—an
unresolved question—or it can be the opposite: a point already settled and not worth discussing further. At any rate, “mute point” is simply wrong, as is the less common “mood point.”
BTW, This may help you out
http://dictionary.reference.com/wordoftheday/ZING!