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Haphazard   /hæphˈæzərd/   Listen
Haphazard

adjective
1.
Dependent upon or characterized by chance.  Synonym: hit-or-miss.  "His judgment is rather hit-or-miss"
2.
Marked by great carelessness.  Synonyms: slapdash, slipshod, sloppy.  "Slapdash work" , "Slipshod spelling" , "Sloppy workmanship"
adverb
1.
Without care; in a slapdash manner.  Synonym: haphazardly.



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"Haphazard" Quotes from Famous Books



... the road by the Nile to Akasha. The advanced base grew during the months of April and May into a strong position. Only once did the Arabs venture to approach within artillery range. A small body of horse and camel men made a sort of haphazard reconnaissance, and, being seen from the outpost line, were fired on at a great distance by a field-gun. They fell back immediately, but it was believed that the range was too great for the projectile to have harmed them; and it was ...
— The River War • Winston S. Churchill

... equipment was better than he knew. In a disorderly haphazard world hatred is as effective an impulse to drive men forward to success as love and high hope. It is a world-old impulse sleeping in the heart of man since the day of Cain. In a way it rings true and strong above the hideous ...
— Marching Men • Sherwood Anderson

... as he who framed his plans in complete disregard of what soil, climate, etc., permit. One of the evils of an abstract or remote external aim in education is that its very inapplicability in practice is likely to react into a haphazard snatching at immediate conditions. A good aim surveys the present state of experience of pupils, and forming a tentative plan of treatment, keeps the plan constantly in view and yet modifies it as conditions develop. The aim, in short, is experimental, and hence constantly ...
— Democracy and Education • John Dewey

... paupers or middle-class gentlemen. That mob of peers did really represent the English people—that is to say, it was honest, ignorant, vaguely excited, almost unanimous, and obviously wrong. Of course, rational democracy is better as an expression of the public will than the haphazard hereditary method. While we are about having any kind of democracy, let it be rational democracy. But if we are to have any kind of oligarchy, let it be irrational oligarchy. Then at least we ...
— Heretics • Gilbert K. Chesterton

... worst enemy. Her own testimony was the principal evidence presented against her, and yet she denied guilt on one particular upon which the attorney-general had interrogated her. This might lead one to suppose that her answers were the haphazard replies of a half-witted woman. But the supposition is by no means consistent with the very definite and clear-cut nature of her testimony. It is useless to try to unravel the tangles of the case. It is possible that under some sort of duress—although ...
— A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 1718 • Wallace Notestein


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