misleading

[ US /mɪˈsɫidɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /mɪslˈiːdɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. designed to deceive or mislead either deliberately or inadvertently
    deliberately deceptive packaging
    statistics can be presented in ways that are misleading
    a misleading similarity
    the deceptive calm in the eye of the storm
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How To Use misleading In A Sentence

  • This war and occupation was founded on Bush's lies and these lies have infected everythingabout thisillegal warand occupation~ from the quasi Iraqi American-controlled government to the purposely misleading body and wounded count and why, you ask? BRING THEM HOME NOW / NOT LATER IN BODY TUBES
  • I challenge anyone to say we are misleading. Times, Sunday Times
  • If Gordon Brown's comments weren't so delusional and misleading it'd be funny. Is Gordon Brown a hypocrite?
  • At best it was enormously misleading, and at worst it was untruthful.
  • The reliance on number crunching was also misleading. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Minister accused of misleading parliament was unavailable for comment last night.
  • In fact it is just as misleading to ignore the packaging and expect some one to assess the new situation without any help.
  • We suggest that this is misleading as different workers have used different sizes of the aorta to define an aneurysm.
  • Ok, so I did something which to me is hilarious, but at the same time I have a slight tinge of guilt for doing it, because its misleading.
  • The airline had also made misleading and denigratory comparisons with competitors. Times, Sunday Times
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