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  1. Dictionary
    injudicious
    /ˌɪndʒʊˈdɪʃəs/

    adjective

    • 1. showing very poor judgement; unwise: "I took a few injudicious swigs of potent cider"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Injudicious means showing bad judgment or making a foolish decision. Learn how to use this formal adjective with synonyms and examples from the Cambridge English Corpus and the Hansard archive.

  3. Injudicious means not judicious, showing lack of judgment, unwise, imprudent, or indiscreet. See the origin, derived forms, and usage examples of this adjective from Dictionary.com.

  4. Injudicious means not judicious, or not wise or prudent. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related entries for injudicious.

  5. Injudicious means showing bad judgment or unwise. Learn how to use this formal adjective with synonyms and examples from the Cambridge English Corpus and Project Gutenberg.

  6. Injudicious means showing very poor judgment or being not discreet or wise. Learn the synonyms, pronunciation, collocations and usage of this formal adjective with examples from Collins English Dictionary.

  7. Definition of injudicious adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. 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. When you regret something you've done, you might decide in retrospect that it was injudicious.