Aside from what Glorfindel points out about brevity and consistency, there is another larger conceptual point to be made here: you are mixing together semantics and implementation details.
When deciding whether to click "undelete" (or "close" or whatever), we want you to approach the decision as if your single vote was going to be binding, and the status of the item was going to instantly change.
Yes, in point of fact, you are just casting a single vote, and multiple votes are going to be required in order for there to be any action taken. However, you should not vote with this in mind. The links are labeled as they are to help discourage you from clicking it for kicks-and-giggles. Your vote is your word. You should stand by it, just as if it had the full power of execution. And eventually it might. Your name will be displayed if/when the post gets eventually undeleted as one of the people responsible.
In fact, sometimes it does—such as when the post already has enough votes from other community members that yours will be the final vote that puts it over the edge. Yes, again, this is generally going to be explicitly demarcated by a vote count next to the link (e.g., "undelete (2)"), but you have to know exactly what the vote thresholds are for each action in order for that to be meaningful to you, which hardly anyone actually remembers.
The voting system is not used to protect against misclicks, but rather to suppress individual voices achieve (at least somewhat of a) community consensus.