Imprudent in a sentence as an adjective

Given how subtle RNG bugs can be, it's probably imprudent to choose it over RSA.

That being said, putting all your liquid capital to work in one round is pretty imprudent, no?

Distasteful, or maybe imprudent, sure, but I don't think it's unethical. When I signed up for Gmail, ads weren't part of the bargain."

They must refrain from imprudent sexual relationships. They must pay their taxes.

They want to cover themselves in case the seed funding both doesn't return anything and looked to be imprudent in retrospect. Luckily I think they're doing well.

I think in the present environment, it wouldn't be imprudent for other nations to look to their own interests.

It's usually imprudent to have 90%+ of your net worth invested in a single three-year-old company, if you have people willing to buy the shares from you.

I think that was imprudent, but either way: let's let it play out instead of wasting time backpedaling. Message board nerd pro-tip: avoid the word "lolwut" if you want to maintain the pretense of evenhandedness.

Active aggression from a Pakistani wife in an arranged marriage may be imprudent.

I think it is not imprudent for Snowden to assume that he may be treated as an "enemy combatant". If the gov't declares him to be under the auspices of the military, I doubt they will announce that publicly.

Knowing Linode, I'm fairly confident it's a strong passphrase; it would be imprudent to secure credit card details with something like "swordfish".

So, making any kind of specific statement in the middle of a crisis is often impossible, and always imprudent.

People should pay for their own lives with their own dollars, and if they are too foolish and imprudent to account for their old age, they should suffer the consequences of their own actions. They have no one to blame but themselves for not analysing the dangers.

But playing semantic games that push particular agendas without the full story is misleading and imprudent.

So how exactly is it imprudent or offensive for Americans to point out some of the common denominators of Europe?

Setting aside the lightning incident, would it be considered imprudent to plug in an electrical device while standing in water?

If you do, and the venture fails, the blame for your reduced quality of life rest not on the failed founder, but on the imprudent investor. The nice thing about SV is not just the big pool of investors, but the big pool of prudent investors who don't behave foolishly.

Unless they were actually in the employ of government agencies, in which case, he's merely imprudent. Assange is, unfortunately, a very flawed sort of protagonist.

Simply not pissing money away on frivolous and imprudent expenses is sufficient to start building significant savings for most people.

I had intended to go public with all this after we had transitioned off the system entirely, but more and more reports have continued to pop up of people having trouble with MongoDB, and it seemed as though delaying would be imprudent. An anonymous warning would be more valuable than saying nothing.

Certainly part of the reluctance of the utilities is a resistance to the new ways of the world, but it would be imprudent to discount the engineering issues that this is exposing. Yes, the utilities, who are not known for large amounts of imagination, should have been ahead of this and embraced this.

They fear that going along with the corresponding projects would be imprudent for them as managers and/or financially irresponsible. Or, through 1940, work was mostly in a management hierarchy where the supervisor knew more and the subordinates were there to add muscle and/or person-hours to the work of the supervisor.

When people know they're sending things to a broader group of recipients they tend to be more thoughtful in how they communicate and just avoid saying many of the imprudent things that would be troublesome in future discovery.

TFA points out that relocation isn't always a rational economic choice for people priced out of these metropolises and that they turn to other measures such as doubling up on housing or spending an imprudent 50%+ of their wages on rents. This places these people in an extremely precarious position financially and increases their chances of homelessness.

His presence in Russia may look like tacit complicity of Russian practices, but he hasn't expressed such a thing so it would be imprudent to make such assumptions. It's like choosing between living in a lion's cage or swimming in shark-infested waters -- would you risk swimming with the sharks to prove a point about how deadly the sharks are, especially when you just threw some chum at them?

Imprudent definitions

adjective

not prudent or wise; "very imprudent of her mother to encourage her in such silly romantic ideas"; "would be imprudent for a noneconomist to talk about the details of economic policy"- A.M.Schlesinger

adjective

lacking wise self-restraint; "an imprudent remark"