broadbrush

broadbrush

(ˈbrɔːdˌbrʌʃ)
adj
lacking full detail or information; incomplete or rough: anything other than a broadbrush strategy for the industry will be overloaded with detail.
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
It's also very broadbrush - that's why there's no reference to specific virtual networking functions or to network slicing: these are capabilities enabled by the underlying technologies and supporting processes.
Stigma and discrimination relating to HIV and AIDS resulted in adoption of the broadbrush approach of EAPs.
"Before that, the society was successful in persuading the council that a criteria-based approach was far preferable to 'areas of least constraint' as they were very broadbrush and effectively created honeypots where developers rushed to create wind turbines.
Second, the RBA's Guidance Note on what were 'reasonable costs' took a broadbrush approach and contained a number of subjective elements.
the negative collateral effects of a broadbrush. nonkinetic attack may be worse than the original problem that precipitated the attack.
The broadbrush strokes centre around increasing national productivity as an immediate target and jacking up diversification on a more sustained basis.
Infiniti describes this car as a 'crossover', a broadbrush term usually applied to SUVs with almost no mud-plugging ability whatsoever.
"When you broadbrush the homeless population and say we're going to deal with it this way, it's very ineffective," he said.
It suggests that the content of these HMS indicators is highly developed when companies use broadbrush budgets, i.e., when budgets are applied loosely.
Considering instance features facilitates a much more nuanced approach than a broadbrush general performance model.
The census data--the only information available to Ghaziani for broadbrush arguments--have only limited value.