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