How To Use Inexpert In A Sentence

  • He was too inexperienced and too inexpert to succeed.
  • Free preteen pussy galleries dublin, police picked, slive an inexpert. We Heart Gossip: The hottest celebrity gossip news - hearted or hated by you!
  • I'm especially concerned about the mentally ill, those whose disabilities may not be quantifiable or tangible to jaded health reviewers too inexpert or insensitive to accept what they don't understand.
  • I felt real pity for Suchet, deploying his talent against such inexpert cast mates.
  • But the expertise of bureaucrats makes it harder for inexpert politicians to hold them to account.
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  • Giambrone confirms that the team sought ceramics that ‘looked good’ to their eyes - eyes, like those of the audience to whom they pitched, that were unabashedly inexpert.
  • Here was the inexpert coffee maker -- he had watched Maria and knew all about it now. THE INNOCENT
  • His talk is of pack-asses, smiths, cobblers, and tanners, and he seems always to be using the same terms for the same things; so that anyone inexpert and thoughtless might laugh his speeches to scorn.
  • She felt silly and uncomfortable sat next to the silent man, but most of all she felt like a child, unversed and inexpert at speaking to adults and looked down at her hands awkwardly, trying to banish the unsettling feeling.
  • Mike pushed his way through the crowd, dekeing out the gawking barricades with daring sidesteps and inexpert but effective shoulder-blocks.
  • He had only a limited knowledge of healing, but it was clear even to the inexpert eye that this man was beyond saving.
  • It's a black comb, studded with dozens of tiny diamonds that seem - to Clark's inexpert eye - pretty close to the real thing.
  • At least with a house you can actually walk round, get a feel of the place, and even the most inexpert can usually tell if the thing is structurally sound and what needs doing to it.
  • Imagine about a fifty metre span of wire inexpertly strung, sneaking through those coolibahs, wilgas and whitewoods.
  • This story is apparently not made up, although I am not yet convinced that we are getting the straight story from the media – after all, the widely reported three-headed British frog of 2004 was, after vigorous discussion, decided to most likely merely be multiple amplexus, inexpertly observed, on one Evolution/Creationism forum see also “Three-headed frog – not!” for the apparently definitive analysis. The Panda's Thumb: Designoids Archives
  • She had made an inexpert attempt to repair the car.
  • The photographic evidence, at least to the inexpert eye, seems very strong.
  • The ancient prophets apparently looked toward an historical climax they expected to occur visibly, on this earth (although to my inexpert ear there are also hints of less worldly expectations).
  • Having encountered a number of "didge" enthusiasts over the years I was keen to discover for myself the assorted delights of this most simple of musical instruments that makes a noise that, when inexpertly played, sounds like a malfunctioning foghorn. Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph
  • I've realised everyone, no matter how inexpert in the culinary arts, has a couple of these recipes up their sleeve.
  • There on the pavement these inexpert children of a pacific age, untrained in arms and uninured to violence, abandoned themselves to amateurish and absurd efforts to hurt and injure one another -- of which the most palpable consequences were dusty backs, ruffled hair and torn and twisted collars. The History of Mr. Polly
  • Our tort system is dominated by vague standards and enforced by dispersed tribunals of inexpert jurors.
  • He grew accustomed to feeling inexpert and out of his depth.
  • Often, inexpert boatsmen call upon his experience to help them through the lock.
  • They were the product of a White House whose attention to international affairs was sporadic, inexpert, and reactive.
  • The brick remained in good condition, mellow and pleasant; the tuff had weathered badly and had been inexpertly restored in places. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • It allows relatively inexpert people to communicate the gravity of the problem to others so teamwork can be handled sensibly.
  • At least the wines tasted very curious to my inexpert palate.
  • But it has that same uninspired atmosphere, where even stylish shots don't look stylish because the lighting is either so natural or so inexpert as to seem nonexistent.
  • Unfortunately, in inexpert hands inappropriate investigation often takes precedence.
  • The adjustment needed is towards a partnership of fellow professionals rather than a hierarchy of expert superordinates and inexpert subordinates.
  • This inexpert fumbling had nothing to do with the Funchal nights. THE GOLDEN LION
  • He was inexpert in driving an automobile.
  • After that, Justin Gregory might also have gone, but was so inexpert in trying to kick Jeffers that he missed with the hack.
  • There on the pavement these inexpert children of a pacific age, untrained in arms and uninured to violence, abandoned themselves to amateurish and absurd efforts to hurt and injure one another — of which the most palpable consequences were dusty backs, ruffled hair and torn and twisted collars. The History of Mr. Polly
  • She had made an inexpert attempt to repair the car.
  • inexpert but conscientious efforts
  • She was dancing with her husband -- a pitiful spectacle, for the lawyer must be pushed through the dance as he were a doll, with monstrous ungracefulness, and no sense of the time of the music, his thin legs quarrelling with each other, his neighbours all confused by his inexpert gyrations, and yet himself with a smirk of satisfaction on his sweating countenance. Doom Castle
  • My own inexpert view is that whether she is proved right or wrong, Spence's basic idea marks a major breakthrough in dating these pyramids.
  • For a reader inexpert in the language, how does Spanish represent or foreground social relations in ways that differ from English?
  • My own, admittedly inexpert, sense is that we should seriously consider replacing what is a fairly complex system of child and child-care support with a single payment to each mother per child.
  • I'm about as inexpert at wild fungus recognition as it's possible to be so I have no idea if they are edible.
  • The girl had a new silk kerchief around her neck, her hair put up inexpertly beneath a bonnet that was liberally trimmed with motheaten feathers and stained rosettes of ribbon. The Serpent's Shadow
  • There were three white skinned women who were inexpertly draped in Indian saris with long sleeved jackets.
  • Problems from inexpert use are droopy eyelid - a condition called ptosis - or a near-frozen forehead, a lop-sided mouth or drooling.
  • But the perceived dichotomy in styles may simply signal that the forger was an inexpert copyist or that the effect results from the vagaries of stone carving.
  • The solicitors knew, or ought reasonably to have known, that the unrepresented, inexpert purchasers, the applicants, had ceded control to the solicitors in the drafting of a document by which contractual rights were to be conferred.
  • The title raised in our mind some vague fears that we might find physiology and psychology mixed up inexpertly with metaphysics; but we see in the writer a close observer, who takes his stand on firm ground, and goes into the objective world of animals for his facts. Man And His Ancestor A Study In Evolution
  • an inexpertly constructed lean-to
  • Marcus paused to scrub at his clean-shaven face, then tousle hair inexpertly trimmed with his own shears. G'lder
  • He whistles, inexpertly trying to mimic the bird's song, then stops and grins.
  • Architecture history buffs used to spend hours inexpertly photographing lush colour pictures from coffee table books.

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