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Not important, pertinent, or germane to the matter at hand or to any issue before the court. this is the most common objection raised by attorneys to questions asked or to answers given during testimony in a trial. the objection is made as soon as an alert attorney believes the opposition is going into matters which are not concerned with the facts or outside the issues of the lawsuit. it is often stated in the trio: “irrelevant, immaterial and incompetent” to cover the bases. the judge must then rule on the relevancy of the question. if the question has been answered before the lawyer could say “objection,” the judge may order that answer stricken from the record. blotting it from a jury’s memory or conscience, though, is impossible.