Need another word that means the same as “irresponsible”? Find 36 synonyms and 30 related words for “irresponsible” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Irresponsible” are: reckless, rash, careless, thoughtless, incautious, unwise, imprudent, ill-advised, ill-considered, injudicious, misguided, heedless, unheeding, inattentive, hasty, overhasty, precipitate, precipitous, wild, foolhardy, impetuous, impulsive, daredevil, negligent, delinquent, neglectful, remiss, careless of one's duty, lax, slack, uncaring, casual, insouciant, immature, naive, foolish
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “irresponsible” as an adjective can have the following definitions:
careless | (of an action or its result) showing or caused by a lack of attention. Hurt by a careless remark. |
careless of one's duty | Without due thought or consideration. |
casual | Employed or established on a temporary or irregular basis. He pretended it was a casual meeting. |
daredevil | Reckless and daring. A daredevil skydiver. |
delinquent | (typically of a young person) tending to commit crime, particularly minor crime. Delinquent minors. |
foolhardy | Marked by defiant disregard for danger or consequences-Macaulay. It would be foolhardy to go into the scheme without support. |
foolish | Devoid of good sense or judgment. He was foolish enough to confide in her. |
hasty | Quick-tempered. Hasty marriage seldom proveth well. |
heedless | Characterized by careless unconcern. Heedless of danger. |
ill-advised | Without careful prior deliberation or counsel. |
ill-considered | Not given careful consideration. |
immature | Not fully developed. His immature sense of humour. |
impetuous | Characterized by undue haste and lack of thought or deliberation. An impetuous but controlled flow of water. |
imprudent | Not showing care for the consequences of an action; rash. Would be imprudent for a noneconomist to talk about the details of economic policy. |
impulsive | Acting or done without forethought. An impulsive gesture of affection. |
inattentive | Not paying attention to something. Inattentive students. |
incautious | (of a person or an action) heedless of potential problems or risks. Incautious talk. |
injudicious | Showing very poor judgement; unwise. An injudicious measure. |
insouciant | Marked by blithe unconcern. An utterly insouciant financial policy. |
lax | Of a speech sound especially a vowel pronounced with the vocal muscles relaxed. Muscles have more potential energy when they are stretched than when they are lax. |
misguided | Poorly conceived or thought out. Their misguided belief that they were defending the honour of their country. |
naive | Of or created by one without formal training simple or naive in style. This naive simple creature with wide friendly eyes so eager to believe appearances. |
neglectful | Not showing due care or attention. Neglectful of his duties. |
negligent | Characterized by neglect and undue lack of concern. Negligent parents. |
overhasty | Done with very great haste and without due deliberation- Shakespeare- Arthur Geddes. Hard times are showing up overhasty mergers. |
precipitate | Done with very great haste and without due deliberation. Wondered whether they had been rather precipitate in deposing the king. |
precipitous | Dangerously high or steep. The precipitous hills of Chinese paintings. |
rash | Marked by defiant disregard for danger or consequences. Do something rash that he will forever repent. |
reckless | Characterized by careless unconcern- Edith Wharton. You mustn t be so reckless. |
remiss | Lacking care or attention to duty; negligent. Remiss of you not to pay your bills. |
slack | Having many sexual encounters or relationships (typically used of a woman). Her mouth went slack. |
thoughtless | Without care or thought for others. It was thoughtless of her to have rushed out and not said where she would be going. |
uncaring | Without care or thought for others. She had always been uncaring of her appearance. |
unheeding | Marked by or paying little heed or attention–Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mary unheeding watched the television. |
unwise | Not appropriate to the purpose. Unwise policy decisions. |
wild | Produced from wild animals or plants without cultivation. He threw a wild pitch. |
airhead | A base close to the area of active operations where supplies and troops can be received and evacuated by air. She s a total airhead. |
ambiguous | Not clear or decided. Ambiguous inkblots. |
bungling | Lacking physical movement skills, especially with the hands- Mary H. A bungling performance. |
cryptic | Of an obscure nature. Cryptic plumage is thought to minimize predation. |
dependent | Unable to stand alone syntactically as a complete sentence. Households with dependent children. |
enigmatic | Resembling an oracle in obscurity of thought. He took the money with an enigmatic smile. |
feckless | Lacking initiative or strength of character; irresponsible. Her feckless younger brother. |
incapable | (followed by `of’) lacking capacity or ability. Incapable of solution. |
incompetent | An incompetent person. The filming was hopeless incompetent. |
incomprehensible | Difficult to understand- A. Einstein. The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible. |
ineffable | Defying expression or description. The ineffable mysteries of the soul. |
ineffective | Lacking in power or forcefulness. A weak and ineffective president. |
inept | Revealing lack of perceptiveness or judgment or finesse. The referee s inept handling of the match. |
inexplicable | Unable to be explained or accounted for. Inexplicable errors. |
inscrutable | Impossible to understand or interpret. Guy looked blankly inscrutable. |
insoluble | Incapable of being dissolved. The problem is not insoluble. |
mysterious | Having an import not apparent to the senses nor obvious to the intelligence; beyond ordinary understanding. The new insurance policy is written without cryptic or mysterious terms. |
paradoxical | Seemingly absurd or self-contradictory. By glorifying the acts of violence they achieve the paradoxical effect of making them trivial. |
paradoxically | In a paradoxical manner. The strength of capitalism is paradoxically also its weakness. |
puzzling | Lacking clarity of meaning; causing confusion or perplexity. A puzzling statement. |
questionable | Able to be refuted. Questionable motives. |
senile | Mentally or physically infirm with age. She couldn t cope with her senile husband. |
sibylline | Having a secret or hidden meaning- John Gunther. His fascinating if sometimes sibylline meditations on the nation. |
unaccountable | Unable to be explained. A powerful and unaccountable institution. |
uncertain | Not able to be relied on; not known or definite. A gun with a rather uncertain trigger. |
unclear | Poorly stated or described. The law itself was unclear on that point. |
unfathomable | Incapable of being fully understood. Her grey eyes were dark with some unfathomable emotion. |
unintelligible | Impossible to understand. Dolphin sounds are unintelligible to humans. |
unqualified | (of a person) not officially recognized as a practitioner of a particular profession or activity through having satisfied the relevant conditions or requirements. The experiment was not an unqualified success. |
unreliable | Lacking a sense of responsibility. He s lazy and unreliable. |
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