injudicious 英 [ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs]   美 [ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs]

injudicious

injudicious  英 [ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs] 美 [ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs]

adj. 不明智的;不慎重的;浅薄的;不聪明的 

Unfortunately, injudicious management of session state can cause serious performance problems. 不幸的是,会话状态管理不当会带来严重的性能问题。
And the WHO, burned by injudicious comments from one of its top officials during the bird flu epidemic, has been more measured in its comments (see Bird flu: the role of science journalists). 而在禽流感流行期间受到它的一个高级官员的不明智的评论伤害的世界卫生组织已经让它的评论更有分寸了(见 禽流感:科学记者的角色)。

  • A decision that's not very smart or well thought out can be called injudicious. It would be injudicious to spend your last five dollars on a fancy coffee drink.
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  • adj. 不明智的;不慎重的;浅薄的;不聪明的
  • 1. Unfortunately, injudicious management of session state can cause serious performance problems.

    不幸的是,会话状态管理不当会带来严重的性能问题。

  • 2. And the WHO, burned by injudicious comments from one of its top officials during the bird flu epidemic, has been more measured in its comments (see Bird flu: the role of science journalists).

    而在禽流感流行期间受到它的一个高级官员的不明智的评论伤害的世界卫生组织已经让它的评论更有分寸了(见 禽流感:科学记者的角色)。

  • 3. This force once made Shi Yuzhu's system injudicious , I believe, it also can become the nightmare with Changjiang Delta real spring likewise.

    这股力量曾经让史玉柱的“系统”失算,我相信,它同样也可以成为江南春真正的噩梦。

  • injudicious (adj.) 1640s, "incapable of judging aright, wanting good judgement," from in- (1) "not, opposite of" + judicious. Meaning "ill-advised" is from 1711. In the older sense the earlier English word was injudicial (c. 1600). Related: Injudiciously; injudiciousness.
in·ju·di·cious / ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs ; NAmE ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs / adjective ( formal) not sensible or wise; not appropriate in a particular situation 不明智的;不当的 SYN unwise an injudicious remark 不当的言语 OPP judicious in·ju·di·cious·ly / ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəsli ; NAmE ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəsli / adverb in·ju·di·cious / ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs ; NAmE ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəs / in·ju·di·cious·ly / ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəsli ; NAmE ˌɪndʒuˈdɪʃəsli /
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