0 past participle, past simple of second-guess --
2 to criticize someone's actions or an event after it has happened: --
The problem remains that introducing an open appeal system would take us back to the discretionary system of the past; the formula might well be second-guessed by an erudite person.
Instead, those decisions are second-guessed and orchestrated by others who do not have their experience.
Councils are now being second-guessed by organisation committees and second-guessed, sometimes wrongly, by adjudicators.
Those obligations must be able to be second-guessed by the sovereign authorities within the sovereign nations.
Above all, it begins to seethe when our laws are second-guessed by a bunch of second-rate judges over whom our democratic system has no control.
My adjectives apply to a programme that second-guessed the evidence and conducted reconstructions.
Professional judgments must not be suborned or second-guessed by voluntary organisations, individuals or politicians.
The implication of that is that he is contemplating that it will be second-guessed.