adjective showing a lack of good sense or judgment; foolish
Used to criticize a politician or policy that is seen as foolish or poorly thought out
Used to describe a person who is impulsive or lacking in sound judgment
Used to describe a risky or ill-conceived business decision
Used to describe a student who consistently makes poor decisions or lacks critical thinking skills
A writer may use 'hare-brained' to describe a character's foolish or impractical idea in a story.
A psychologist may use 'hare-brained' to describe a patient's irrational or illogical thinking patterns.
A business analyst may use 'hare-brained' to criticize a proposed strategy or decision that seems unrealistic or poorly thought out.
An engineer may use 'hare-brained' to refer to a design or solution that is overly complicated or unfeasible.
A teacher may use 'hare-brained' to describe a student's wild or unrealistic proposal for a project or assignment.
A lawyer may use 'hare-brained' to discredit an opposing party's argument as illogical or nonsensical.
A chef may use 'hare-brained' to criticize a colleague's impractical or unworkable recipe idea.
A financial advisor may use 'hare-brained' to caution a client against making a risky or foolish investment.
A marketing manager may use 'hare-brained' to dismiss a team member's unrealistic or unachievable campaign proposal.
A doctor may use 'hare-brained' to describe a patient's self-diagnosis or treatment plan that lacks medical basis.