unwise
31fools rush in — unwise people are often reckless and imprudent …
32fools rush in where angels fear to tread — unwise people are often reckless and imprudent …
33ill advised — unwise, imprudent, foolish …
34rash move — unwise step …
35penny wise and pound foolish — unwise because doing something small now would prevent much more trouble later. Education budget cuts are penny wise and pound foolish – public education is an investment in our future …
36unwisely — unwise ► ADJECTIVE ▪ foolish. DERIVATIVES unwisely adverb …
37ill-advised — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. unwise, imprudent. See folly. II (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. foolish, unwise, imprudent, ill considered; see rash , stupid1 , wrong 3 . III (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) a. unwise, imprudent, misguided,… …
38Injudicious — In ju*di cious, a. [Pref. in not + judicious; cf. F. injudicieux.] 1. Not judicious; wanting in sound judgment; undiscerning; indiscreet; unwise; as, an injudicious adviser. [1913 Webster] An injudicious biographer who undertook to be his editor… …
39Emily Thornberry — Infobox MP honorific prefix = name = Emily Thornberry honorific suffix = MP constituency MP = Islington South and Finsbury parliament = majority = 484 (1.6%) predecessor = Chris Smith successor = Incumbent term start = 5 May 2005 term end = birth …
40tempt — temptable, adj. /tempt/, v.t. 1. to entice or allure to do something often regarded as unwise, wrong, or immoral. 2. to attract, appeal strongly to, or invite: The offer tempts me. 3. to render strongly disposed to do something: The book tempted… …