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"ill-judged" Definitions
  1. that has not been carefully thought about; not appropriate in a particular situation

104 Sentences With "ill judged"

How to use ill judged in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "ill judged" and check conjugation/comparative form for "ill judged". Mastering all the usages of "ill judged" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" McLaren responded, saying Whitmarsh was "ill judged and ill informed.
Some are ill-judged, uncosted and not subject to cost-benefit analysis.
When they are true, the lack of transparency tends to be ill judged.
The bank was brought low by years of ill-judged acquisitions and mismanagement.
Ofcom, Britain's media regulator, eviscerated his leadership as "difficult to comprehend and ill-judged".
Mr Kavanaugh's self-righteous anger seemed all the more ill-judged, and unpleasant, by comparison.
A combination of mismanagement, ill-judged investments and weak global demand has left it in crisis.
" She blamed the ill-judged spoof on scientific visitors who "let their humour go too far.
"Their actions were ill-judged, naïve and almost guaranteed to incur a crackdown," he told VICE News.
"I continue to unequivocally regret my ill-judged association with Jeffrey Epstein," Prince Andrew said in a statement.
"I continue to unequivocally regret my ill-judged association with Jeffrey Epstein," Andrew said in his statement Wednesday.
Public resentment has made no difference to brutal, ill-judged efforts to dictate how many children families can have.
Extracts from Mr Kaczynski's journals appear at intervals in the story, ill-judged interpolations that feel forced and overstated.
Mr Hammond's best move would be to undo the most ill-judged bits of the fiscal strategy he inherited.
"We consider James Murdoch's conduct to be both difficult to comprehend and ill-judged," the regulator wrote in 2012.
"I continue to unequivocally regret my ill-judged association with Jeffrey Epstein," Andrew said in his statement in November.
This was likely not its planned destination, but it was there for a purpose, however ill-judged in that moment.
But it is unwise to subject such powerful men to so little criticism, as Mr Kelly's ill-judged intervention illustrates.
The Fed needlessly unsettled the markets with its defiant response to government's ill-judged comments on its pending interest rate decisions.
Mr Corbyn's support for the late Hugo Chávez looks even more ill-judged now that Venezuela has fallen deeper into anarchy.
The British Chambers of Commerce called it ill-judged and the Institute of Directors said the BoE had "jumped the gun".
Critical remarks about members of his own government, the judiciary and footballers published in a recent book were ill-judged oversharing.
Ill-judged "security theatre", such as sending heavily armed soldiers to patrol French beaches, may make people feel more anxious than safe.
Look at Dixon, standing in the police station and listening to ABBA 's "Chiquitita"—a sublimely ill-judged choice—on his headphones.
"It's disappointing to be written off by some ill-judged words," said Nicky Newton-King, chief executive of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange.
"I continue to unequivocally regret my ill-judged association with Jeffrey Epstein," Andrew said in a statement in November after the interview.
Many locals want Carrie Lam to quit the rare political role that carries the corporate-style title for her ill-judged extradition proposal.
In many ways, it's unfortunate that the Jordanian parliamentary elections have become the subject of controversy due to an ill-judged floral arrangement.
Italy has more than 20 of these, but Mr Salvini's ill-judged words have jeopardised one of the few of them that works.
Even if America does not inflict a recession on itself—through ill-judged trade policies, say—a global shock could do the job.
Following Mr Heaton-Harris's ill-judged letter, hyperbolic comparisons by academics to Soviet Russia and McCarthyite America did little to help their cause.
It was a rocky day for May, weakened after she lost the Conservatives' majority in parliament in an ill-judged election last year.
Opposition lawmakers said those accusations showed the weakness of May, who lost her party's majority in an ill-judged election two months ago.
The state had no choice but to stand behind failing banks, but it took the ill-judged decision to all but abandon insolvent households.
It is also worth remembering the near universal condemnation of Donald Trump's ill-judged comment that women who have illegal abortions should be punished.
UBS's role also raised eyebrows because Andrea Orcel, its head of investment banking, advised on the ill-judged takeover of ABN Amro in 2007.
The new division between best picture and popular picture may be ill-judged, but it reflects a pre-existing dichotomy between arthouse and multiplex fare.
Within North Korea, U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton's ill-judged comments on a "Libya model" may have deepened the already considerable nervousness about denuclearization.
At one point, we are confronted by BMX bikers—a spectacularly ill-judged addition, though it does drive home the firmness of period details elsewhere.
He said he regretted his "ill-judged" association with Epstein and that he had never seen anything suspicious during the time he spent with the financier.
After losing the Conservative Party's majority in an ill-judged election last June, May relies on the support of a small Northern Irish party to pass legislation.
After all, David Cameron only pledged a referendum on Brexit in January 2013 as a gambit - ill-judged, it now seems - to placate restive Eurosceptics within his party.
After losing the Conservatives' parliamentary majority in an ill-judged snap election last June, May relies on the support of a small Northern Irish party to pass legislation.
Such was the fate of the ill-judged and ill-founded J.C.P.O.A., which Donald Trump killed on Tuesday by refusing to again waive sanctions on the Islamic Republic.
The Siena-based bank has been laid low by ill-judged acquisitions and mismanagement and has the largest proportion of bad debts among Italian lenders compared to its capital.
In 1941, Mr. Stirling, an aristocratic dilettante who found his calling as a soldier, was recuperating in a Cairo hospital from injuries sustained during an ill-judged parachute jump.
I will be making clear my views that any such measure will be ill-judged for the reasons set out and also because it would likely disadvantage smaller member states.
Andrew has described his association with Epstein as "ill-judged" and in November the prince stepped down from public duties as the allegations became a distraction for the royal family.
Although he entered office sounding like a strongman, he has been hemmed in by congress, by his advisers and by his own ill-judged behaviour and that of his family.
Although Theresa May was sensitive enough to write to MPs who have faced death threats, she recently gave an ill-judged speech blaming Parliament for thwarting the people's will on Brexit.
But Rudd now might join forces with other pro-EU Conservative lawmakers, further reducing May's strength in parliament, where she lost her party's majority at an ill-judged election last year.
Previous presidents have made similar mistakes: Barack Obama's ill-judged military exit from Iraq in 2011 created the conditions in which the Islamic State metastasized three years later (forcing our return).
Recent embarrassments include allegations that a Miami-based company paid property taxes for his wife, revelations that he plagiarised part of his university thesis and an ill-judged rendezvous with Donald Trump.
In 2002, my mother rightly despaired at my deeply ill-judged attempts to look like Avril Lavigne, reminding me that Avril didn't actually dress entirely in her brother's old shirts and paisley bandanas.
But others said May had adopted the most realistic plan after losing her parliamentary majority in an ill-judged election last year, leaving her reliant on a small Northern Irish party to govern.
Yet many residents and local officials were glad to see him gone, complaining of corrupt practices and ill-judged construction projects that have created unsustainable urban sprawl and even a shortage of water.
With our phones in our hands and our eyes on our phones, each of us is a reporter, each a photographer, unedited and ill judged, chatting, snapping, tweeting, and posting, yikking and yakking.
For now, May, who has been written off by critics regularly since losing her Conservative Party's parliamentary majority in an ill-judged election last year, will be buoyed by the hard-won agreement.
" Sitwell apologized immediately after the email was made public, calling it an "ill-judged joke" and claiming that "I love and respect people of all appetites be they vegan, vegetarian or meat eaters.
It is yet another battle for a weakened prime minister whose leadership is being questioned after scandals within her party, gaffes and an ill-judged election that lost her party its majority in parliament.
It may well make Mr Carney more likely to jump ship (as a Canadian migrant he is, after all, a "citizen of nowhere", to use Mrs May's ill-judged slur on high-flying globetrotters).
Mr Johnson has a close relationship with Ms Mirza, forged when she was one of his deputies as mayor of London and reinforced when she defended ill-judged comments he had made about burqas.
The businessman, whose other firms include India's largest brewer United Breweries, is under pressure from banks to repay more than $1 billion in loans linked to ill-judged expansion, including his defunct Kingfisher Airlines.
But opposition lawmakers said the paper was tantamount to admitting defeat by a government which lost its authority at an ill-judged election two months ago by watering down one of its "red lines".
Andrew, Elizabeth's second son, stepped down from royal duties last week saying the controversy surrounding his "ill-judged" association with late U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein had caused major disruption to the royal family's work.
However, the interview was widely viewed as a disaster and days later he stepped down from royal duties saying his "ill-judged" association with Epstein had caused major disruption to the royal family's work.
Despite the EU rhetoric, which some in Britain see as ill-judged, government officials played down any tensions and described Monday's hour-long meeting between Barnier and Brexit Secretary David Davis as cordial and constructive.
Divisions over Britain's Brexit strategy have resurfaced after Prime Minister Theresa May lost her parliamentary majority in an ill-judged snap election in June, generating renewed political pressure from some quarters for a softer exit.
But this optimism faded rapidly in early May, when Noble forecast a first-quarter loss of $130m—blamed largely on ill-judged coal trades—and warned that it might not return to profitability until 2019.
Once emblematic of RBS's penchant for risk taking and ill-judged expansion, culminating in the bank's 45.5 billion pound bailout in 2008, NatWest Markets' streamlined ambitions reflect its parent's drive to concentrate on key markets.
Clinton's militaristic and interventionist foreign policy record is littered with ill-judged decisions and colossal mistakes that have left a trail of death, destruction, destabilization and the displacement of millions of people across the world.
After losing her party's majority in parliament at an ill-judged election last year, she now relies on the support of a small Northern Irish party and the distance between victory and defeat is narrow.
After months of headlines dominated by Brexit, scandal and an ill-judged election, May will try to show that she has a grip on domestic issues to help counter the rising popularity of the opposition Labour Party.
Earlier in the day, Senator Pat Roberts, Republican of Kansas, made an ill-judged quip that he quickly had to apologize for: "I wouldn't want to lose my mammograms," he said to a reporter from Talking Points Memo.
As her minority government prepares to start the difficult task of passing Brexit through parliament, May will remind Britons of her promise to build a fairer society, seeking to repair a reputation damaged by an ill-judged snap election.
DUBLIN (Reuters) - A European Commission proposal to levy a short-term tax on the turnover of companies with significant digital revenue in Europe is ill-judged in the absence of globally agreed rules, Ireland's Prime Minister said on Wednesday.
Pick your college friends wisely, and they'll be your friends forever: I sprayed purple vomit all over my best friend's shoe after one ill-judged narcotics-related adventure in our second year, and we're still pals a decade on.
In June, with membership of his Labour Party on the rise, Prime Minister Theresa May bogged down in Brexit talks and her Conservative Party in chaos after an ill-judged snap election, Corbyn said he could be in office by Christmas.
The government had initially said the visit would take place later this year, but media has reported the trip could be postponed for various reasons ranging from fears over protests to May's weakened authority after an ill-judged election gamble.
After losing her party's majority at an ill-judged election last year, May has put off committing to a single plan, offering Brussels two options — the customs partnership or a technology-based streamlined customs arrangement, both of which EU negotiators have dismissed.
The ugly connective tissue that's being glimpsed behind the scenes across the tech industry, whether via outspoken anti-diversity sentiments or ill-judged digital product launches or indeed sexism that's so baked in as to be systemic, does not look like a coincidence.
With Mr. Macron's popularity plunging even below the levels experienced by his predecessor, François Hollande, in polls late in the summer — a succession of ill-judged, apparently disdainful comments to citizens had not helped — Mr. Collomb was not shy about offering a diagnosis.
He replaces Stephen Barclay, a former banker popular among industry executives, who was appointed health minister as part of a cabinet reshuffle meant to stamp May's authority on the government after months of divisions over Brexit, scandals and an ill-judged election.
LONDON, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa May named immigration minister Brandon Lewis chairman of her Conservative Party on Monday at the start of a reshuffle she hopes will re-energise an agenda hurt by divisions over Brexit and an ill-judged election.
However, they said the FBI has no current plans to interview Britain's Prince Andrew, a friend of Epstein's who stepped down from his public duties in November because of what he called his "ill-judged" association with the well-connected money manager.
The visit begins rather disastrously with an ill-judged newspaper interview (cue a duplicitous journalist sung by a countertenor), mass demonstrations (more crowd scenes) and questions all around (cue voices from the wings—American senators asking, at tempo accelerando, urgent questions about that Russia investigation).
More parochially, in 2009 the Daily Telegraph revealed that MPs routinely abused their expenses to do up homes that they sold on at a profit, as well as for sundry other ill-judged and absurd outlays such as the renovation of moats and the housing of ducks.
Finally, Beijing seethes with talk that retired and serving members of the government accuse Team Xi of ill-judged boasting about the country's rise, as when state media talked up a "Made In China 2025" plan to dominate such high-tech sectors as robotics and artificial intelligence.
Looking back at Gulliver's first ever post, the recurrent theme of many recent ones—namely the absurdities of poorly thought-out business practices, often accompanied by ill-judged government regulations—was clearly there at the start: Upgrade your inbox and get our Daily Dispatch and Editor's Picks.
The Duke of York, who's the second son of Queen Elizabeth II, said in a statement released by the royal family Wednesday that he continues to regret his "ill-judged association" with Epstein, which he said has become a "major disruption" to his family's charitable work.
LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Theresa May named an ally to run the ruling Conservatives and promoted younger ministers on Monday to try to give her divided party and government a new start after a year marred by an ill-judged election, rows over Brexit and scandals.
Add to this the gumption of recreating a scene in which a man tells his best friend's wife he's in love with her, when Johnson's own personal life is controversial at best, and the entire thing starts to look disingenuous and ill-judged from every angle.
After running a campaign built on ineffectual scaremongering, ill-judged identity politics, desperate attempts to link Khan to violent terrorism and the pretence of liking Bollywood films, Goldsmith has now, at last, found a tactic by which he can overcome Khan's dangerous brand of unexceptional decency.
After an ill-judged election last year, May relies on the help of a deal with a small Northern Irish party to win votes in the Commons and can afford to lose no more than a handful of Conservative rebels if she is to avoid an embarrassing defeat.
The only party member besides Lindner with that kind of stature is Wolfgang Kubicki, whose political skills are unquestioned but who is also known as a loose cannon, a reputation that may not suit a sensitive job where a few ill-judged words can move global financial markets.
But some athletes, unaware of the potential damage an ill-judged selfie or distasteful joke could cause, were caught out—like the Swiss footballer sent home after directing a racial slur at the South Korean team, or the Greek triple-jumper banned after racist tweets about African immigrants.
The announcement, which came in a Twitter post by Mr. Trump that included a false jab at former President Barack Obama, is the latest reverberation from a hasty and ill-judged invitation made around a year ago, when Mr. Trump was offered, and accepted, a state visit to Britain.
"It seems to us that even by the standards of some of these trade unions, this is chronically ill-timed and ill-judged," he said, adding that it could coincide with the period in which the company will be announcing base cuts, closures and job losses because of MAX delivery delays.
In 2006, Mr. Cameron had foolishly dismissed UKIP members as "fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists" — a remark as unfortunate and ill-judged as Hillary Clinton's "basket of deplorables" — yet it was they who ended up winning the race they cared most about, bringing down the Cameron premiership along the way.
Perhaps the damage Mrs Clinton suffered from an ill-judged intervention from the FBI's director, James Comey—eleven days before the poll he raised a fresh suspicion about her e-mails, which he then tried to allay a week later—accounted for some of those votes, which, combined with winning the popular vote, will feed Democrats' sense of grievance.
Or maybe just a super awkward wedding ceremony... Not much more is known about the celebrations themselves, but it seems they featured naked dudes just hanging out, because according to Roman chronicler Cassius Dio, "one of the prattling boys, such as the women keep about them for their amusement, naked as a rule," made an ill-judged joke about Livia's previous husband being in attendance.
An ill-judged snap election in June cost her party its majority in parliament and has sapped her authority at a time when she is trying to heal deep divisions within her own party and negotiate Britain's departure from the EU. The European Parliament's Brexit negotiator doused hopes that those negotiations were nearing a breakthrough, saying "major issues" must still be resolved on safeguarding citizens' rights.
But Leadsom unexpectedly quit on Monday after a campaign dogged by ill-judged comments about her rival's lack of children and questions about whether she had exaggerated her CV. "I am honoured and humbled to have been chosen by the Conservative Party to become its leader," said May, who favoured remaining in the EU but has made clear there is no going back on the result of the June 23 referendum.
The toppling of Saddam Hussein, combined with a bungled occupation and ill-judged choices — like L. Paul Bremer III's disastrous decision to dissolve the Iraqi Army, which would result in scores of angry armed men without jobs, and fuel the insurgency — unleashed ancient hatreds between Sunni and Shiites and led to cascading horrors, including the toxic rise of the Islamic State and a tsunami of violence that would spread across the region.

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