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词汇 injudicious
释义

Definition of injudicious in English:

injudicious

adjective ɪndʒʊˈdɪʃəsˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs
  • Showing very poor judgement; unwise.

    判断力差的;不明智的

    I took a few injudicious swigs of potent cider

    我很不明智地喝了几大口烈性苹果酒。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Despite the striker conceding that he has been guilty of injudicious comments, he feels hard done by in being considered by some to be an agitator too ready to put his concerns ahead of those of his team.
    • It was too nice a day to feel bad about it, even if there were anything to be gained by a bit of injudicious panic and alarm.
    • There are risks that some mishap or injudicious remark by a minister might ignite a popular reaction from a volatile electorate.
    • One hesitates to use the word ‘unique’ to describe the economic conditions engendered by the terrorist attacks on America, for that might encourage an injudicious policy response.
    • Though libel law has always applied to Web content, most bloggers have flown beneath the radar, making it possible to disseminate their sometimes injudicious remarks with virtual impunity.
    • I also felt dehydrated by the previous evening which had been dominated by Tej, Ethiopian honey wine, backed up by some injudicious sampling of the local cloudy millet beer.
    • These comments are not to make excuses for the lamentable behaviour of people who are spurred to acts of injudicious behaviour and sometimes gratuitous violence because they have taken too much alcohol.
    • Experts have warned that injudicious use of the drugs could be seeds of a disaster, possibly in spreading drug-resistant strains of the virus.
    • No matter how silly the questions, the poor victim must remain charming and keep repeating titillating soundbites, without ever actually being injudicious or displeasing the capricious movie-going masses.
    • This could be jeopardised, in whole or in part, by injudicious withdrawals.
    • Books take up space, and libraries, being confined by walls, must occasionally weed the shelves of injudicious pamphlets and books unborrowed through the centuries.
    • It is as if the Minister was admonished by the PM for conceding that the Government is capable of poor judgment, hasty and injudicious decisions only to avoid the pressure.
    • There's been any number of outstanding, occasionally even great, starting rotations, though rating them is injudicious, if not entirely invalid.
    • Unfortunately, a belief in destiny, or rather pre-determination, led to his downfall: he was injudicious about the disabled.
    • He recognises, however, that it would be politically injudicious to speak of leaving just after having secured a mandate.
    • Love makes us do and say the silliest things, and my friend has been quite injudicious in his wholehearted leap into a new enthusiasm.
    • Furthermore, injudicious use of antibiotics has led to increasing bacterial resistance, resulting in ineffectiveness of commonly used antibiotics.
    • I think it would be injudicious and unwise for the Florida legislature to go ahead and certify these electors until we know precisely whether or not we can go ahead and count every vote.
    • For Celtic's French defender has shown a propensity for injudicious decision-making when finding himself in the white heat of colossal continental confrontations.
    • A snarling confrontation, there were far too many injudicious challenges and petty personal squabbles to allow football to flow.
    Synonyms
    imprudent, unwise, inadvisable, ill-advised, misguided
    ill-considered, ill-judged, incautious, hasty, rash, spur-of-the-moment, unguarded, foolish, foolhardy, hare-brained, hot-headed
    indiscreet, tactless, inappropriate, unsuitable, wrong, wrong-headed
    impolitic, inexpedient, undesirable
    informal dumb

Derivatives

  • injudiciously

  • adverb ˌɪndʒʊˈdɪʃəsliˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəsli
    • However, when used injudiciously on animation, it wipes out portions of the image that should be retained.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Maybe it is time that Taiwan's intellectuals step forward and launch another newspaper boycott - as was the case 10 years ago when the United Daily News injudiciously printed stories that appeared to be designed to stir up fear in Taiwan.
      • In our submission, the primary judge improperly, and somewhat injudiciously, instructed counsel for the respondents in our absence on the morning of 20 November, and then was misled by a flawed transcript.
      • He invested recklessly and injudiciously in schemes that became an ever-increasing drain on his family's savings.
      • Two such academics were so upset by the broadcast they injudiciously let the cat out of the bag completely.
  • injudiciousness

  • noun ˌɪndʒʊˈdɪʃəsnəsˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəsnəs
    • Faith is the very antithesis of reason, injudiciousness a crucial component of spiritual devotion.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • We have heard time and time again about the injudiciousness of such a move in the present climate in New Zealand.
      • The end result of such injudiciousness is frequently an underweight or overweight mother and/or baby.

Definition of injudicious in US English:

injudicious

adjectiveˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəsˌinjo͞oˈdiSHəs
  • Showing very poor judgment; unwise.

    判断力差的;不明智的

    I took a few injudicious swigs of potent cider

    我很不明智地喝了几大口烈性苹果酒。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Furthermore, injudicious use of antibiotics has led to increasing bacterial resistance, resulting in ineffectiveness of commonly used antibiotics.
    • For Celtic's French defender has shown a propensity for injudicious decision-making when finding himself in the white heat of colossal continental confrontations.
    • Despite the striker conceding that he has been guilty of injudicious comments, he feels hard done by in being considered by some to be an agitator too ready to put his concerns ahead of those of his team.
    • Though libel law has always applied to Web content, most bloggers have flown beneath the radar, making it possible to disseminate their sometimes injudicious remarks with virtual impunity.
    • He recognises, however, that it would be politically injudicious to speak of leaving just after having secured a mandate.
    • Books take up space, and libraries, being confined by walls, must occasionally weed the shelves of injudicious pamphlets and books unborrowed through the centuries.
    • Experts have warned that injudicious use of the drugs could be seeds of a disaster, possibly in spreading drug-resistant strains of the virus.
    • It was too nice a day to feel bad about it, even if there were anything to be gained by a bit of injudicious panic and alarm.
    • Unfortunately, a belief in destiny, or rather pre-determination, led to his downfall: he was injudicious about the disabled.
    • There's been any number of outstanding, occasionally even great, starting rotations, though rating them is injudicious, if not entirely invalid.
    • No matter how silly the questions, the poor victim must remain charming and keep repeating titillating soundbites, without ever actually being injudicious or displeasing the capricious movie-going masses.
    • It is as if the Minister was admonished by the PM for conceding that the Government is capable of poor judgment, hasty and injudicious decisions only to avoid the pressure.
    • I also felt dehydrated by the previous evening which had been dominated by Tej, Ethiopian honey wine, backed up by some injudicious sampling of the local cloudy millet beer.
    • This could be jeopardised, in whole or in part, by injudicious withdrawals.
    • Love makes us do and say the silliest things, and my friend has been quite injudicious in his wholehearted leap into a new enthusiasm.
    • These comments are not to make excuses for the lamentable behaviour of people who are spurred to acts of injudicious behaviour and sometimes gratuitous violence because they have taken too much alcohol.
    • One hesitates to use the word ‘unique’ to describe the economic conditions engendered by the terrorist attacks on America, for that might encourage an injudicious policy response.
    • There are risks that some mishap or injudicious remark by a minister might ignite a popular reaction from a volatile electorate.
    • I think it would be injudicious and unwise for the Florida legislature to go ahead and certify these electors until we know precisely whether or not we can go ahead and count every vote.
    • A snarling confrontation, there were far too many injudicious challenges and petty personal squabbles to allow football to flow.
    Synonyms
    imprudent, unwise, inadvisable, ill-advised, misguided
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