0 present participle of second-guess
2 to criticize someone's actions or an event after it has happened:
It is an organized and persistent second-guessing from the sidelines.
The perusal and attempted analysis of variants produces any amount of second-guessing.
All this recrimination and second-guessing is quite understandable given the dramatic rise and fall of health care reform in the early 1990s.
The fact that psychologists are (in)famous for deceiving participants is likely to magnify participants' uncertainty and second-guessing.
The geographic framing of the enterprise, as established by the first section, will undoubtedly inspire some second-guessing.
The absence of a story forces his listeners into second-guessing his intent.
How might we research and write about the intersection of new media and popular music without being cynical, without being celebratory, and without second-guessing ourselves into a corner?
Her persistence may result in the physicians second-guessing their own assessment, although this is not made clear in the case.