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Characterized by undue haste and lack of thought or deliberation; (`brainish' is archaic)
impulsive
impetuous
madcap
hotheaded
tearaway
incautious
impulsive
impetuous
madcap
hotheaded
tearaway
1
Home food preparation may be critical to weight control for
impulsive
individuals.
2
The authors suggest a possible relationship between
impulsive
traits and method choice.
3
When she came to the state road, she made an
impulsive
decision.
4
Even though I'm conservative on these financial decisions, I'm also quite
impulsive
.
5
The activity begins in an
impulsive
form; that is, it is blind.
1
But I think it was an
impetuous
and dangerous course of action.
2
And so the last word of the parable is to the
impetuous
.
3
Thonolan had courage, rash and
impetuous
;
Ayla's is the courage to endure.
4
But he was very young; under fifteen, in fact, and very
impetuous
.
5
There was seductiveness for Elisaveta in the nakedness of these
impetuous
bodies.
1
For once the
madcap
girl got the better of the practised courtier.
2
You used to have always that
madcap
lot with you, din't you?
3
On the old subject: my
madcap
brother Louis and his sage tutor.
4
One of the
madcap
friends of Zoe was to be a singing-girl.
5
We walked to the Bois to-day, and she romped like a
madcap
.
1
The
hotheaded
youth was now very close to being angry in earnest.
2
True, he was
hotheaded
,
like all of us, but-tocome to this.
3
He is young, and
hotheaded
,
and he is the emperor, after all.
4
And it would take more than this
hotheaded
punk to stop him.
5
Methinks he has grown less
hotheaded
after that spell in the Tower!
1
By now I was a real
tearaway
and was experimenting with drugs.
2
Is it true that he became a bit of a
tearaway
after Titanic?
3
When Noel Edmonds was a youngster, he was actually a
tearaway
.
4
The stripper with the
tearaway
suit showed up as one of their applicants.
5
What else would an Anglo Irish
tearaway
on a horse shout in 1901?