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TOEFL BNC: 23888 COCA: 25452

imprudent

1 ENTRIES FOUND:
imprudent /ɪmˈpruːdn̩t/ adjective
imprudent
/ɪmˈpruːdn̩t/
adjective
Learner's definition of IMPRUDENT
[more imprudent; most imprudent] formal
: not wise or sensible : not prudent不明智的;轻率的

— imprudence

/ɪmˈpruːdn̩s/ noun [noncount]

— imprudently

adverb
TOEFL BNC: 23888 COCA: 25452

imprudent

adjective

im·​pru·​dent (ˌ)im-ˈprü-dᵊnt How to pronounce imprudent (audio)
: not prudent : lacking discretion, wisdom, or good judgment
an imprudent investor
imprudently adverb

Example Sentences

It's politically imprudent to stir up such controversy during an election year. a very sweet girl, but so imprudent that no one trusts her with a secret
Recent Examples on the Web Overall, Republicans have offered a promising alternative to the Biden administration’s fiscally imprudent student loan policies and left-wing calls for debt cancellation en masse. Preston Cooper, Forbes, 17 Aug. 2022 Recycling the concertina wire, and trashing the imprudent idea of promoting militarization with it, would be a better direction for thinking of healing border communities from the decades of harm that misguided enforcement policies have caused. San Diego Union-Tribune, 1 Sep. 2022 And drawing grand conclusions in August is often imprudent. Dan Wiederer, Chicago Tribune, 28 Aug. 2022 His career-long master plot was ruin through overreach: an impractical and imprudent and profligate greatness. Richard Brody, The New Yorker, 23 July 2022 Their union would have been imprudent by 19th-century English standards. K. Austin Collins, Rolling Stone, 16 July 2022 While the guidance isn’t mandatory, regulators would certainly have questions for any bank that lines up an imprudent fintech partnership. Paul Davis, Forbes, 12 Oct. 2021 This is a very imprudent assumption that could lead to war and, ultimately, American defeat. Elbridge Colby, WSJ, 27 Oct. 2021 Betting that Beyond Meat would ever achieve market share so much greater than the largest companies in the meat business is imprudent for fiduciaries and risky, to say the least. David Trainer, Forbes, 31 Aug. 2021 See More

Word History

Etymology

Middle English, from Latin imprudent-, imprudens, from in- + prudent-, prudens prudent

First Known Use

14th century, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of imprudent was in the 14th century
TOEFL BNC: 23888 COCA: 25452

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