Ill-chosen in a sentence as an adjective

The word "disingenuous" was ill-chosen and I can see that I should have phrased it better.

" In short, I build my ill-chosen example into the definition.

This is an interesting insight into the dangers of ill-chosen metrics.

This is a particularly ill-chosen thread to deliberately try to re-flame this flamewar.

" you hear, ignoring the small voice in your head wondering if all of the beauty of computation can really be foisted into ill-chosen paradigms.

The so-called real world is also out of touch with academia: just witness countless upon countless of ill-chosen technologies and techniques in use.

I enjoyed your original rant against economists and the damage some of their bold but ultimately baseless claims can do, but many of your examples seem ill-chosen.

I think the point here is that he "paid back toward society" by creating jobs and charities, not by forking over his money to the government for it to waste on inefficient pork-barrel projects and other ill-chosen boondoggles.

> It seems, though, that java's default modifier was maybe ill-chosen, as private and public modifiers seem far more prevalent than no modifierMy impression is that people often simply don't know exactly what the default modifier does, whereas they're more confident in the behaviour of public and private.

>This is a particularly ill-chosen thread to deliberately try to re-flame this flamewarApparently it's the right thread to be rude and to assign intentions to people you don't know though?And all because they dared say their opinion on a subject you're sensitive about?How about that: people can have any opinion they like on Python 3, including considering it a botched migration process and a **-hum update.

Ill-chosen definitions

adjective

not elegant or graceful in expression; "an awkward prose style"; "a clumsy apology"; "his cumbersome writing style"; "if the rumor is true, can anything be more inept than to repeat it now?"

See also: awkward clumsy cumbersome inapt inept