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Discover LudwigThe phrase "advised remarks" is not commonly used in written English and may sound awkward.
It could be used in contexts where someone is referring to comments or suggestions that have been recommended or advised by someone else.
Example: "The committee provided their advised remarks on the proposal during the meeting."
Alternatives: "recommended comments" or "suggested feedback".
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But Labour said that the prime minister was "out of touch" if he thought that women's anger with the government was based on ill advised remarks to female colleagues, rather than spending cuts that were hitting women "twice as hard as men".
What this staffer and others forget is that they can go around without being noticed -- unless they post ill advised remarks that go viral.
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More recently, the Downing Street adviser, Lord Young, was forced to resign from his post after making ill-advised remarks over lunch with the Telegraph's Whitehall editor, Christopher Hope.
A 30-year old male fourth year peer advising leader remarked: "The Colleges program provides an important link between faculty and students, which had been thus far missing, and a way to strengthen or establish inter-class relationships... .....
Two weeks ago, a Nobel Laureate made some ill-advised remarks in front of the World Conference of Science Journalism.
NPR has had its share of management snafus, including the clumsy firing last fall of Juan Williams, a commentator who made ill-advised remarks about Muslims.
The general's ill-advised remarks, which have prompted him to prepare a letter of resignation, will only feed the general sense of despair and impatience that Americans seem to feel about our progress in Afghanistan.
Apparently, when she was Secretary of State she made some ill-advised remarks that did not go down well with certain cadres of what remained of the extreme Left in Berkeley.
KEVIN PIETERSEN Cricketer South African-born but (according to his Twitter page) a "proud English cricketer", Pietersen has an undeniable talent with the bat but also has a habit of making headlines with ill-advised remarks.
In 2005 Lawrence Summers, the president of Harvard, made some ill-advised remarks about the reasons there were fewer women than men in university science and engineering departments, suggesting that "issues of intrinsic aptitude" were merely "reinforced by what are in fact lesser factors involving socialisation and continuing discrimination".
The drama is likely to be coveted by film festival curators: European cinema's enfant terrible has even been invited back into the fold at Cannes, despite a high-profile incident in 2011 that saw him declared "persona non grata" after making ill-advised remarks during a press conference for his film Melancholia.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com