(a.) Not politic; contrary to, or wanting in, policy; unwise; imprudent; indiscreet; inexpedient; as, an impolitic ruler, law, or measure.
Example Sentences:
(1) Lebedev said it would be "impolite" for him to think about any influence on British politics.
(2) 2) Subjects who received impolite messages showed positive attitude change toward computers despite the impolite messages.
(3) But we suppress so much just because it's impolite."
(4) Subjects became aggressive when impolite message were given repeatedly.
(5) But there is also the legendary case of the renowned South Korean director Shin Sang-ok who was actually kidnapped in 1978 from Hong Kong on the orders of Kim Jong-il who wanted him to make films promoting the good name of North Korea — the South Koreans evidently accepted (or thought it impolitic publicly to dispute) Kim’s claim that Shin had come willingly.
(6) To be impolite, it is theft," he said , branding search engines such as Google and Yahoo as "content kleptomaniacs" .
(7) And Gehry has a history of struggles with boards and impolitic comments.
(8) The frontrunner has spent much of the campaign apologising for impolite remarks about neighbours.
(9) But before the night ended, Minaj responded to criticism from the show’s host, Miley Cyrus, who had said in a New York Times interview last week that Minaj’s criticism was impolite and came from a place of jealousy.
(10) "But be punished in a way where people don't feel the managers are strange or weird or impolite people, or people without control."
(11) Taking a mobile phone picture of the emperor or his family is also considered impolite.
(12) I do, partly because it seems ungrateful and impolite not to, and partly because there's nothing else, really, to call oneself while retaining any connection to an original sense of justice.
(13) She declined to say how old she was, deeming it an “impolite question”, saying instead: “If you really need a number then go ahead and make it up based on my photographs”.
(14) Randall’s occasionally impolitic remarks made national headlines such as in 2010 when he referred to the national broadcaster as “Gay-BC”, and again in 2011 when he accused the mining industry of being “pussy -whipped” by Rudd’s successor, Julia Gillard, over the proposed mining tax.
(15) I believe at the end of the day I'll be seen as the 'impolite guy', the one who's aggressive in his words.
(16) But Judt's willingness to voice, as the New York Times recently put it, "impolite truths" brought attacks from fellow intellectuals.
(17) To act otherwise would have been “aggressive” and impolite.
(18) 5.05pm BST 1 min: The Dutch allow Australia to get some early touches at the back without any impolite pressure.
(19) Indeed, while the point of this study was to examine the medical profession's use of placebos, nobody seems impolite enough to point out that there are times when it's the patients' own fault if they end up smarting from a saline injection they didn't need.
(20) Giddings said that although he did not believe he had undermined or personally criticised Welby, he had apologised to the archbishop, who had since told him he had found nothing offensive, discourteous, impolite or disrespectful in his words.
Unadvisable
Definition:
(a.) Not advisable; inadvisable; inexpedient.
Example Sentences:
(1) Topical administration of Isoproterenol reduces the intraocular pressure in glaucomatous eyes, but produces systemic side-effects (tachycardia arterial hypotension) that make its clinical use unadvisable.
(2) For this reasons, it is unadvisable to carve even the carvable composits.
(3) Treatment is a problem because surgical resection of a precancerous lesion is considered by some to be unadvisable in patients with high surgical risk.
(4) Mechanical intravaginal contraception is obtained through a diaphragm or a cervical cap, both to be prescribed and fitted by a doctor, and both unadvisable in case of uterine prolapse.
(5) The use of ultrasonics to eliminate vegetative cells or to break aggregates in Bacillus spore suspensions to be used subsequently in heat resistance experiments appears to be unadvisable.
(6) Because of the risk of pseudomembranous colitis, prophylactic use of clindamycin to prevent postoperative infections following colorectal surgery seems unadvisable.
(7) The two-stage surgical approach is unnecessary and probably unadvisable for patients with coarctation of the aorta and associated intracardiac lesions.
(8) In this connection it is admitted unadvisable to enforce it into agricultural practice.
(9) Establishment of the lower tunnel however seems unadvisable because of the common damage to the nasopalatine nerve passing through the incisive foramen with occasional permanent sequelae.
(10) Abortion is legal within the first 3 months of pregnancy when requested directly by the woman, and when a doctor testifies, in writing, that the pregnancy could be dangerous to the woman's physical or mental health, or that it would be totally unadvisable for social or economic conditions, or that there is danger of congenital anomalies for the infant.
(11) While lowering the blood pressure during an acute stroke may be in principle unadvisable, it seems reasonable to prevent a new increase in blood pressure with adequate therapy.
(12) The first of our cases is associated with patent ductus arteriosus and pulmonary hypertension with severe pulmonary vascular bed changes; surgical closure was considered unadvisable.
(13) There are 4 types of metabolic responses to the injection of DHEA-S: 1) metabolic clearance of DHEA-S, which represents the proportion between production and plasma concentrations of DHEA-S; 2) metabolic clearance of DHEA-S into estradiol, which presupposes the utilization of radioactive materials and is, therefore, unadvisable; 3) metabolic conversion of DHEA-S into estrogens, which can be measured in the urine or in the blood plasma; and 4) increase in the plasma concentrations of DHEA-S and androstenedione, caused by the enzymatic process implied in the conversion of DHEA-S into estrogens.
(14) Recent experience with cerebral aneurysms suggests that it is unadvisable to abide by the principle that angiography should be delayed for 7-10 days and surgery still longer.
(15) In the diagnosis of polycytemia vera, estimation of erythrocyte volume (EV) from plasma volume (PV) and venous hematocrit (Hctv) is usually thought unadvisable, because the ratio of whole body hematocrit to venous hematocrit (f ratio) is higher in patients with splenomegaly than in normal subjects, and varies considerably between individuals.
(16) Anatomic and funtional evaluation is only possible by cardiac catheterization and angiocardiography, because pulmonary hypertension appears at a very early stage and once fixed makes surgical treatment unadvisable.