How To Use Misconstrue In A Sentence

  • The notion of legal matrimony as a blessed union of souls is as misconstrued as it is unnecessary.
  • The media deliberately misconstrue things because they want to confuse people.
  • Palmer's obliquity should not be misconstrued as cold blood, his hiddenness as hermeticism.
  • I am terribly sorry that this inside joke has been misconstrued to be a slur on any other president.
  • Everything was out in the open, there was no real danger of my position being misconstrued.
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  • Don't misinterpret my comments as criticism; She misconstrued my remarks.
  • It is easy to misconstrue confidence as arrogance.
  • I was very stern - no hanky-panky and no unnecessary smiling which could be misconstrued.
  • He added that he also saw the column as an opportunity to combat peoples 'tendency to "misconstrue" his words: "I feel like when I'm the only one writing, it's not like' Telephone '... <i>Page Six Magazine</i>'s Liam McMullan On New Column: 'It's Going to Be More About What I See Than What I Do'
  • An outsider might misconstrue the nature of the relationship.
  • To make this mistake is to misconstrue the personal nature of power.
  • This both misconstrues the data and misses the point.
  • From what I've seen the press have been careful not to 'misconstrue' his remarks surprise surprise but in this case I can see how skewered his mentality is. The Ultra-Moonbat Strikes Again
  • No, because now it would be unadvisable from a lawyer's point of view, because it would be misconstrued.
  • I was interviewed by your paper last week and feel that some of what I have said was misconstrued in the article.
  • They were never trusted, their simplest, most innocent acts were misconstrued, their word doubted, and, as in Beverly's case, Miss Woodhull had more than once cruelly baited and insulted them. A Dixie School Girl
  • I have never misconstrued or misdoubted your affection to our house. The Abbot
  • Mr Purcell said it would be difficult to see how someone could "misconstrue" the Northampton firm for a major film company making multi-million pound spy movies. BBC News | News Front Page | UK Edition
  • Amusement can be gained from tombstone epitaphs which, when read differently, can see intentions misconstrued to say the least.
  • They don't want any flexibility on their part to be misconstrued as a sign of weakness.
  • The key here is that we have certain abilities capabilities rights as human beings (bearing a child is one a woman has that a man does not) and that our Constitution does not beknight any of us, but rather it specifies some Rights so nobody can misconstrue that they aren't included. BuzzFlash.net: published
  • An outsider might misconstrue the nature of the relationship.
  • We got the promoter to change this because it might be misconstrued by those not familiar with wrestling.
  • She misconstrued my remarks
  • Even if it is done in the spirit of goodwill and friendship it could be misconstrued.
  • You misconstrue the significance of McCaulife and the ultimate immateriality of what folks like Herbert write. McAuliffe Hosting Unity Event For Obama
  • The person sitting in front of the fire was shocked that the facts of the real story had been so misconstrued.
  • I think you misconstrued my point, and I meany absolutely no criticism of you. Merging White Dwarfs Set Off Supernovae | Universe Today
  • Yes, I think "misconstrue" is the correct word - for everything in your response. Think Progress
  • It's just far too easy for the written word to be misconstrued.
  • Her gaze narrowed and he realized how his words could be misconstrued.
  • This last quip seems to have been widely misconstrued.
  • I'm trying to show how maybe I tend to misunderstand things or misconstrue things or tend to foreground certain things.
  • This shift in sensibility toward orality is not a single literary movement, as it has sometimes been misconstrued.
  • Take, for instance, 'The North Will Rise Again' from the new 'Grotesque' album, a song widely misconstrued as just another provincialist rant: New Musical Express
  • We've all heard of the term guru, and while it's gotten misconstrued and possibly watered down into a layman's term lately, the original meaning of guru was simple -- one who helped to remove darkness in order to reveal the light. Alanna Kaivalya: 3 Qualifications of a Yoga Teacher
  • This didn't really go down so well because they repeated and misconstrued every word, and she rang me up and abused me.
  • Prison Service Orders say staff should not wear unauthorised badges or pins, and whatever the reasons for wearing it, the badge concerned could be misconstrued.
  • What I was attempting to say (albeit too concise – and more easily misconstrued) was that the woman pictured behind the picket was already being forced to hide herself by her own culture/religion. Should you have to hide the real you to be accepted – muslim | My[confined]Space
  • He is, after all, a writer of such clarity that his work can only be misconstrued by an effort of will.
  • When mentioned, it's often to misconstrue the word as meaning "blind obedience to parents" and then to proceed to criticize it.
  • But don't let the philosophically-alluding title misconstrue your perceptions of what Gaming Nexus
  • Even if it is done in the spirit of goodwill and friendship it could be misconstrued.
  • I worry that this advice may be misconstrued, especially at a time when the news is full of journalistic imperfections.
  • The company's management has long argued that the relationship between ASP and gross margin is tenuous at best and we were cautioned a half dozen times not to "misconstrue" last week's results and declining ASPs. Minyanville
  • An outsider might misconstrue the nature of the relationship.
  • When your overtures are misconstrued, the prudent course is sometimes to apologise and withdraw.
  • Of all our subjects, Thrse may be the easiest to overlook or misconstrue. RIDDLE ME THIS
  • He knew everything that every one else had misconceptions about or misconstrued.
  • It will be misconstrued as bribery, which is frowned on in legal circles.
  • He deliberately misconstrued everything I said.
  • He never moved but what, if there was any danger of his conduct being misconstrued or ill-reported, he looked carefully about him and counted the cost of every inch of conspicuity. Sister Carrie
  • My comments should not be misconstrued to mean that every transaction referred to as a loan by modern finance parlance implicates usury. If it is true, then so be it.
  • Yet many leaders fail to motivate people to achieve results because those leaders misconstrue the concept and applications of motivation .
  • It concerns me greatly that not only was the event misconstrued, but I was personally misquoted.
  • Tablet which, however misconstrued at first as an exposition of the science of divination, was later recognized to have unravelled, on the one hand, the mystery of the Musta_gh_á_th_, and to have abstrusely alluded, on the other, to the nineteen years which must needs elapse between the God Passes By
  • I hope that I may not be misconstrued into saying that the progenitors of whales did actually possess mouths lamellated like the beak of a duck. VII. Miscellaneous Objections to the Theory of Natural Selection
  • Their gentleness and sagacity, their kindness to their wives and loyalty to their families has been misconstrued.
  • And I couldn't wait to say that it could be misconstrued as a hatred for someone who they want to berate, which is tantamount to character assassination, because of race, culture and the color of their skin. In Defense of Manny Pacquiao
  • His behaviour could easily be misconstrued.
  • Or do I misconstrue what you consider to have been a brief show of teeth to enforce some sort of disclosure detante vis-a-vis her prior perfidies? Feinstein Explains Her Reticence* About Panetta Nomination
  • On the one hand, Pope's symbolic erasure of "Madam Dacier" anticipates her misconstrued legacy.
  • If this kind of political correctness continues, where phrases are misconstrued to make it seem someone has made a racist, agist or sexist remark, I fear all spontaneity will be lost in future interviews and debates. Blitzer: Was Obama taking aim at McCain's age?
  • Be polite, and double-check your words so that nothing you say could be misconstrued.
  • Of all our subjects, Thrse may be the easiest to overlook or misconstrue. RIDDLE ME THIS

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