injudicious in the PONS Dictionary

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Most people believe that the injudicious use of antibiotics is to blame for these developments.
www.cnn.com
It may even be that your itching ear canals are a direct result of your injudicious use of cotton swabs.
hanfordsentinel.com
Loss of privacy and injudicious sharing of information are not the only risks.
www.smh.com.au
Certainly it is impossible to imagine either of them being caught making injudicious remarks to a television reporter.
www.thehindu.com
He's often injudicious about the people that he partners with.
www.theglobeandmail.com
This may have been because his plan involved a rather injudicious use of high explosives.
www.theawl.com
Someone's going to end up looking injudicious, we guess.
www.iptv-news.com
The inevitable consequence of widespread and injudicious use of antibacterials has been the emergence of antibiotic-resistant pathogens, resulting in a serious threat to global public health.
en.wikipedia.org
Governors who were too high-handed or injudicious in the exercise of their office occasionally fell foul of the local political institutions.
en.wikipedia.org
If plans, then they are garbled, ill-considered, uncosted, irresponsible, injudicious and plain silly - yes, silly - plans.
www.abc.net.au

Would you like to add some words, phrases or translations?

Just let us know. We look forward to hearing from you.

Choose your language Deutsch | български | English | Français | Italiano | Polski | Русский