Imprudéntia, imprudentiæ, f. g. Cicer.Lacke of forestght in not thinking of a thing: ignorance.Adijcere oculorum imprudentiam.Cic. Vide ADIICIO. Per imprudentiam in oratione sæpe versus dicimus.Cic.We speasie verses oftentimes vnwares, and not knowing of it.Labi in imprudentiam. Varto. Vide LABOR. Peccate imprudentia.Terent.To offende vnwares, or by ignornnce, or vnwittingly.Quod sæpe per imprndentiam fit. Cice. Which is often done when men thinke not of it.Imprudenter. Aduerb. Terent.Vnwisely: fooltshly: vnadussedly: vnwittingly: rashly.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
imprūdentĭa (inpr-), ae, f. [imprudens], want of foresight or of knowledge, inconsiderateness, imprudence, ignorance, inadvertence: tantusque ab imprudentia eventus utraque castra tenuit pavor, Liv. 4, 39, 6: quo modo prudentia esset, nisi foret contra imprudentia?Gell. 6, 1, 4: propter imprudentiam, ut ignosceretur, petiverunt ... ignoscere imprudentiae dixit, etc., Caes. B. G. 4, 27, 4 sq.; 5, 3, 6; 7, 29, 4; id. B. C. 3, 112, 3; cf. Ter. Eun. prol. 27: imprudentia est, cum scisse aliquid is, qui arguitur, negatur, Cic. Inv. 2, 31, 95; 1, 27, 41: locorum, Petr. 79: qui perperam judicassent, quod saepe per imprudentiam fit, Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 23, 57: inculcamus per imprudentiam saepe etiam minus usitatos (versus in oratione), sed tamen versus, id. Or. 56, 189: in quo ne per imprudentiam quidem errare potest, etc., id. Fam. 3, 10, 9; cf. Quint. 1, 5, 53: imprudentia teli emissi brevius propriis verbis exponi non potuit,