-
destruction through every part of a besieger's approaches,
where the
guard is
injudiciously disposed and ill commanded; but that if due
precautions have been observed...
-
Characters may be
antagonists without being evil – they may
simply be
injudicious and
unlikeable for the audience. In some stories, such as The Catcher...
-
retrieved 25
October 2021 "Prince Philip's
Australia knighthood was '
injudicious'
admits Abbott", BBC News, 1
October 2015,
archived from the original...
-
given to the
doctrine of
constructive powers, by the
indulgence of an
injudicious zeal for
bills of rights. —Alexander Hamilton's
opposition to the Bill...
-
horticulturists have
recognized 81
garden varieties, some of
which have
injudiciously been
planted in its
natural range. In some
varieties the pink of the...
-
English author Sir
Nathaniel Wraxall once
wrote from Vienna: "[T]he
injudicious bigotry of the
Empress may
chiefly be
attributed the
deficiency [in learning]...
-
similar to the Frederiksborger, but
often has a
spotted coat. In the past,
injudicious breeding for this
characteristic alone compromised its
constitution and...
- The work of d' Annunzio,
although by many of the
younger generation injudiciously and
extravagantly admired, is
almost the most
important literary work...
- on the change: It is
admitted that the
former gentleman [Hayne] is
injudiciously pitted against Clay and
Webster and,
nullification out of the question...
- author" but his arguments, "though
always ingenious", were "sometimes
injudicious". In 1798, Sir John Mitford, the Solicitor-General,
cited the book in...