ADJECTIVE
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dependent upon or characterized by chance
a haphazard plan of action
his judgment is rather hit-or-miss
How To Use hit-or-miss In A Sentence
- Long-term planning is always rather a hit-or-miss affair.
- Long-term planning is always rather a hit-or-miss affair.
- Miller is a first-rate intellectual but an unreliably quirky, quixotically overcerebral, hit-or-miss director.
- She's well aware, even when Kay Kay refrains from pointing it out, that she's responsible in a hit-or-miss way. HOMELAND AND OTHER STORIES
- The stories were hit-or-miss, butwith always nice art from The Dude. Archive 2005-02-01
- Plot holes and hit-or-miss acting aside, the moviemakersâ most grievous miscalculation is that itâs just too long. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
- But cloning animals is still a hit-or-miss affair.
- Of its component parts the more substantial ones are perhaps the most easily acquired; not in hit-or-miss, anything-to-get-it-done fashion, but with a view to carrying out some definite idea of table adornment, which is quite the most charming part of the home building. The Complete Home
- I knew the book was a hit-or-miss item when I submitted it - either there would be a lot of interest in LAN parties, or it would be a niche book that nobody would know what to do with. Weird
- his judgment is rather hit-or-miss