Prudent in a sentence as an adjective

The new guy responded that would never be prudent.

Hernan Cortez didn't burn his ships because it was prudent.

It's possible to have thought war was a prudent course of action in 2003, then to have changed one's mind by 2013.

Cities will be forced to grow within their means, and that pressure will force more prudent fiscal policy going forward.

It would be prudent for you to be skeptical when you hear these claims, often on daytime television or on the internet.

"You are of course free to take any steps you deem prudent or necessary to ensure the integrity of your online presence.

You are of course free to take any steps you deem prudent or necessary to ensure the integrity of your online presence.

I worry that the remaining leadership at Apple sees this war as their memorial to Jobs, and will take it far further than might be prudent.

But even the prudent ones will be trying to jack up their salaries because there are SO many things you are supposed to save for to be considered a responsible American adult.

We don't know the economics of super boxes versus home delivery, and it would be perilously naive to assume that a move to it demonstrates that it is fiscally prudent.

Or any one stock?Even for company insiders who really believe in the future of their company, it isn't prudent to hold more than a small fraction of a billion-dollar fortune in one stock, from a purely rational perspective.

The danger of a surveillance state is not the obscure chance of a truly evil person abusing the system; rather, the actual threat, the real danger, is a person with good intentions who believes that their draconian actions are morally justified and prudent.

The money transmitter laws are basically laws that give state governments the authority to require that bonds be provided, that minimum capitalization requirements be met, and that other precautions taken, to ensure that whoever handles escrowed monies takes prudent steps to protect those whose funds are entrusted to them.

Prudent definitions

adjective

careful and sensible; marked by sound judgment; "a prudent manager"; "prudent rulers"; "prudent hesitation"; "more prudent to hide than to fight"