prudent
prudent — 形容詞
1. making sensible decisions by thinking carefully about what might happen in the f
審慎的
做事謹慎、避免風險的
making sensible decisions by thinking carefully about what might happen in the future, especially to avoid problems or danger
Amira made a prudent decision to save part of her salary each month.
Amira 做了審慎的決定,每個月把一部分薪水存起來。
collocation: prudent decision
It was not prudent for Takeshi to invest all his savings in a single company.
Takeshi 把所有積蓄都投資在同一家公司,這樣做並不審慎。
pattern: it is prudent for [sb] to do [sth]
The charity's prudent financial planning helped it survive the economic slowdown.
該慈善機構審慎的財務規劃幫助它度過了經濟衰退期。
Felix chose a more prudent approach by waiting for better weather before sailing.
Felix 選擇了更審慎的做法,等天氣轉好再出海航行。
Rania's parents taught her that prudent spending is the key to long-term security.
Rania 的父母教導她,審慎花錢是長期財務穩定的關鍵。
- cautious
focuses on avoiding immediate danger or error; less about long-term foresight than prudent
- sensible
broader and more everyday; covers general good judgment without the formal or financial tone of prudent
- wise
suggests deep experience and understanding beyond risk calculation; more personal and less business-oriented
- judicious
more formal, applied to considered professional or legal decisions; narrower in scope
文法句型
prudent + noun
it + be + prudent + to-infinitive
it + be + prudent + for + noun + to-infinitive
用法筆記
Commonly paired with nouns related to money, planning, or risk (decision, approach, investment, planning, spending). Unlike careful — which can apply to any small task — prudent always implies looking ahead to avoid significant future problems.