[
UK
/mɪstˈaɪmɪŋ/
]
NOUN
- something located at a time when it could not have existed or occurred
How To Use mistiming In A Sentence
- Batsmen need to use their feet cleverly when playing on the slightly slower pitches here so that they are in a position to play the ball without mistiming it.
- Speaking of balls hit on the ground, opposing infielders, particularly the shortstop, have a habit of mistiming their dives.
- She must have looked crestfallen at her mistiming, because he said suddenly: `You have walked here? THE GOLDEN LION
- The spectacular mistiming of his own 2001 memoir, Fugitive Days, doomed the book to short-term infamy and long-term obscurity. Deconstructing Obama
- Not mistiming any tackles, rarely wasting the ball and never stopping running, we could have done with four Coles in midfield.
- How many times have we seen him waste his pace advantage by mistiming his runs and be flagged offside, even when he was looking along the line?
- Having spent three weeks looking at the abysmal track record of the majority of fund managers, and the danger of even slightly mistiming your investments, I really do wonder why anyone bothers trying.
- Jones also said Gannett Offset is reaping some benefits from CC1's APR software, which automatically calculates and corrects any unit-to-unit mistiming that may occur prior to makeready. Undefined
- This will result in your clashing with him or mistiming your movement which will end up destroying the effectiveness of the technique.
- However much a bumpy surface might have inconvenienced both sets of players, it hardly excused the lack of control and horrible mistiming of the ball which characterised the first half.