Foolish in a sentence as an adjective

It's foolish to simply declare, "it's not your choice".

I think it's foolish, and needs to stop, but it doesn't threaten our freedom directly.

On the other hand, letting lawyers run wild with their reviews is foolish as well.

This is an extremely foolish title, and the tone of the article is likewise foolish.

Not just wrong or misguided or foolish, but unethical.

Steve Jobs' "Stay hungry, stay foolish" comes to mind, and I'll side with his blissfully ignorant optimism any day.

Expecting some part is foolish - we can, at best, offer our services to help them make their newly acquired purchase even better.

As Orwell wrote, "the English language ... becomes ugly and inaccurate because our thoughts are foolish, but the slovenliness of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts.

Others of you are paid similar salaries for similar things, and any of you who would be so foolish as to write honest opinions would be out on the streets looking for another job.

Here are some other reasons:1- WiFi drains battery fast, therefore advertising instant WiFi unlocking was foolish, if not purposefully misleading from the beginning.

However, to make broad, sweeping generalisations about someone based on a single fact - whether it's the fact that they have an MBA, what school they went to or the colour of their skin - is pretty foolish because the exceptions will bite you on the ***.

A related lesson, in case a lawsuit ever did result on signing any complex contract blindly, is that entrepreneurs can act foolishly in casually inviting lawsuits by failing to manage the legal review process at all and simply signing complex contracts as is.

But in a Europe coming out of feudalism where they were trying to define national loyalties and borders, worried about losing territory to the neighboring country, worried about all sorts of things that look foolish from a modern perspective, well, if Jews weren't going to care if they were Polish or Russian, that was a huge problem.

Foolish definitions

adjective

devoid of good sense or judgment; "foolish remarks"; "a foolish decision"

adjective

having or revealing stupidity; "ridiculous anserine behavior"; "a dopey answer"; "a dopey kid"; "some fool idea about rewriting authors' books"

See also: anserine dopy dopey goosey goosy gooselike jerky