ill-judged

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English

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Etymology

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From ill +‎ judged.

Adjective

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ill-judged (comparative more ill-judged, superlative most ill-judged)

  1. Badly judged, unwise, rash.
    • 2020 August 12, Nigel Harris, “Comment Special: Catastrophe at Carmont”, in Rail, page 4:
      The most disgraceful and distasteful example was the Scottish Sun's crass front page with its 'Death Express' headline, alongside a picture of the late Driver McCullough. It was ill-judged, callous and insensitive.

Derived terms

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References

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