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Discover LudwigThe word "hare-brained" is correct and usable in written English.
It is used to describe a foolish or reckless plan or idea, usually one that is irrational and unlikely to be successful. For example, "After having his hare-brained scheme foiled, Bill realized he should stop trying to get rich quick."
Dictionary
hare-brained
adjective
Alternative form of harebrained
Exact(60)
Twitter imposes another restraint: each post must be an answer to the same question: What are you doing?Thinking with the left brain, most reasonable people seem to agree that this idea is hare-brained, frivolous, banal and ridiculous.
The more hare-brained schemes involved cobbling together floating platforms.
That sounds dangerously like hare-brained European utopianism to me.
This vision was not some hare-brained scheme.
Most shows spend hours upon hours establishing grand hare-brained mythologies as if grand hare-brained mythologies are the most natural things in the world.
Overall, let's file this one as unlikely but not hare-brained.
Ketchum later wrote of Sim's "hare-brained experiments" and his "lack of scientific (and ethical) judgment".
"Some are really hare-brained," he says, recounting their sales pitches.
Fifty consecutive days of swimming seems like a good and fairly hare-brained challenge.
Stockholders have also let companies make hare-brained acquisitions that produced significant writedowns almost immediately.
The "hare-brained" idea of negotiating peace is now "well and truly over", she says.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com