Adjective
ill-matched (comparative more ill-matched, superlative most ill-matched)
not well suited to each other; poorly matched.
As a married couple they are quite ill-matched.
He married his second wife, Komsomol activist Margarita Kainova, in 1956; the couple proved ill-matched, and divorced three years later. Source: Internet
The investigation is conducted, intriguingly, by an ill-matched pair of detectives: Wehrmacht Captain Martin Bora and an American Catholic priest, Father John Malecki, who has been sent by the Pope to evaluate the claims of the abbess' mystic powers. Source: Internet
He finds no other tonally analogous speech in all of Shakespeare, concluding it is "a bundle of ill-matched conceits held together by sticky sentimentalism." Source: Internet
The resulting site would draw visitors because of the product, then lose them because of ill-matched content and a design that makes incorrect assumptions. Source: Internet