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One-word substitution (legal Latin): Determine the meaning of a ‘‘mala fide’’ case in legal/administrative usage and pick the correct paraphrase. Context: ‘‘Mala fide’’ contrasts with ‘‘bona fide’’ (good faith) in describing intent or honesty. Instruction: Choose the option that most accurately captures the phrase.

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Which is undertaken in a bad faith

Explanation:


Given data

  • Term: mala fide (Latin).
  • We must choose its correct paraphrase among the options.


Concept / Approach
Mala fide = ‘‘in bad faith’’ (dishonestly, with improper motive). Its opposite is bona fide = ‘‘in good faith’’ (honestly, legitimately).


Elimination
Good faith — opposite of the target; incorrect. ❌Bad faith — correct sense of mala fide. ✅After a long delay — concerns timing, not intent. ❌Not undertaken at all — unrelated. ❌


Examples
‘‘The transfer order was quashed as mala fide.’’ → It was issued with an improper motive.


Common pitfalls

  • Confusing spelling variants ‘‘malafide’’ with the standard two-word ‘‘mala fide’’; the meaning remains the same.


Final Answer
Which is undertaken in a bad faith

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