Judicious in a sentence as an adjective

It just could have been so much better had the author chosen to strike a more judicious tone.

There's nothing wrong with judicious use of data-mining as a tool in research.

I wonder if it's just a judicious amount of prudence on his part or if even he fears it may not be feasible in his lifetime.

I've made a little money here and there, enough to pay for servers and have a few thousand laying around for judicious experiments.

Thus the paradox is that in order to maximize the growth of knowledge we make judicious use of small talk, platitudes, humor, etc.

"My wife recently convinced me to give it another try. I didn't use my complete name, and was judicious about the information I associated with my profile.

Some code uses monkey-patching gratuitously and that can harm maintainability, but judicious use of monkey patching is not a problem.

Root cause analysis and a judicious application of process change can help greatly, but the reality is that even simple things such as this do not change overnight in healthcare.

But we still have to be judicious in granting these monopolies: "...it may be observed that the nations which refuse monopolies of invention are as fruitful as England in new and useful devices.

Imperative languages "get things done", and given judicious use of appropriate libraries may be able to do concurrency just as well if not better than a purely functional language like Haskell.

Also, some judicious capitalism would help redress the severe resource misallocation between education software, which is probably societally important, and mobiphotosocialgames.

Judicious definitions

adjective

marked by the exercise of good judgment or common sense in practical matters; "judicious use of one's money"; "a wise decision"

See also: wise heady