The law lets any citizen sue over allegedly false or misleading statements by a business. |
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Watch any car ad on TV and you'll see propaganda that's deliberately misleading. |
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Well, it may arise independently but we are now talking about what you said was false and misleading statement. |
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Even if it exists, in many cases it is either out of print, very hard to get, poorly written or incorrect and misleading. |
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They were excellent, though the description gives a misleading impression of oriental flavours. |
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Our conclusion was that these were incorrect, grossly distorted and thus misleading. |
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The Pentagon introduced misleading information pertinent to stealth aircraft, space defense, and tactical aircraft. |
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These include the fact that misspellings and typographical errors in previous legal documents were misleading. |
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It counts forging headers, misleading subject lines or falsely claiming an email was requested as the defining characteristics of spam. |
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The risk is in misleading the audience, trivializing the horror, and reducing the madness into something mundane. |
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They are dishonest, misleading, factually incorrect, selective with data and paranoid. |
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It was an inauspicious beginning and there were many complaints about cancelled shows and misleading publicity. |
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If anyone is misleading the American public, it is you for presenting a series of half-truths as the whole truth. |
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The very structure of their objections is deliberately misleading when it's not utterly truthless. |
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Eliminating peer review would increase the risk of early release of reports containing misleading and inadequately evaluated information. |
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Of course, it was now clear that misleading me was the whole point of this little game. |
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He said the residents' group was making a number of misleading and inaccurate statements. |
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Housing associations and the government use many misleading arguments to persuade and cajole council tenants into agreeing to stock transfers. |
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This can be avoided by restricting blatant and misleading advertising in the media. |
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But once that has been sifted through, there is far more that is simply unbiblical and, without questioning the sincerity, misleading. |
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The Trade Practices Act is basically about misleading or deceptive conduct, or unconscionable conduct. |
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The Magistrate found firstly that they had engaged in misleading and deceptive conduct and also unconscionable conduct. |
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Disorganized and misleading reports from muddle-headed reporters create a vicious circle which aggravates the situation. |
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Subsequent error-free testing, with the packet set to eight bytes, confirmed that the documentation had been misleading. |
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It will also be a criminal offence to give false or misleading information to the Ombudsman Commission. |
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The lead author, Dr Nick Day, admitted at the press conference that someone had added the misleading heading to the previously agreed body text. |
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Police have misinterpreted facts and made exaggerations that are misleading. |
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But this way of slicing and dicing the numbers seems inherently misleading. |
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It allows one to put out misleading simplifications as long as the caveats, ifs and buts are buried somewhere in the detailed material. |
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Such regimes put up a veneer of stability, unity and consensus, just as democracies project a misleading veneer of weakness. |
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Why did the minister provide false and misleading information to the South Australian police minister? |
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What goes wholly unmentioned is that the way lifespan statistics are used in this argument is inherently misleading. |
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In these, and all matters, Laursen's expressionless tone and apparent insouciance can be misleading. |
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It is said on behalf of the Claimant that this vitiated the decision-making process because it was misleading. |
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Dr. Jim L. Turner, assistant vice chancellor for graduate programs at UCLA, wonders if that isn't misleading. |
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The snippiness of his e-mail is worth noting, but I want to comment on its highly misleading content. |
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In fact, direct experience can be a fast way for kids to learn the ropes of misleading ad campaigns. |
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Generals admitted relying on intelligence reports of ground damage that were unverified, contradictory, erroneous and misleading. |
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Is information misleading because the research methods used do not take into consideration the sociocultural background of participants? |
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His front page is slightly misleading, all the images are recent uploads of the same subject. |
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Justifying speciesism takes us back to square one, but with an ugly, misleading and tendentious neologism thrown in. |
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Mexico's tequila makers bridled at its touting of Tequiza's tequila base, claiming it was misleading. |
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Witness Mr Fogarty an engineer agreed with this, stating that it was not a good place to overtake and that the broken white line was misleading. |
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But underlying the brute numbers, which can bounce around in a misleading way, is the trend, and that is worth getting excited about. |
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They now say that clinical trials are misused, abused, misleading, biased, and fallible. |
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Behaviorism, not cognitive science or psychology, offers a misleading account of what is inside the head. |
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But they can be brought to book under legislation governing companies making false and misleading claims. |
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But thanks to the net, the misleading news spread at hyperspeed and even prompted a Wall Street selloff when it appeared Bush was in trouble. |
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She is accused of lying to and otherwise misleading officers of the law in a Wall Street insider trading case. |
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Any image or idea we have of God is certainly inadequate, probably inaccurate, and possibly misleading. |
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If researchers are willing to disseminate misleading claims then their integrity is brought into question. |
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The name is misleading, since this is not a member of the rush family, but a distant relative of water plantains and water soldier. |
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Luigi Dallapiccola's acid remark about Vivaldi, often repeated, is misleading. |
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Nonetheless, to suggest that Old English as a written language was ever quite dead and buried would be misleading. |
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He also was charged with giving misleading evidence to stewards and bringing racing into disrepute. |
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And the statement of fact in the latter case seems to be less misleading and equivocal than in the former. |
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We must lift our eyes from the misleading and myopic platitudes of our politicians and look to the future. |
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It is an epic of distortion and evasion and contradiction and misleading rhetorical ploys. |
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Indeed, some of them were whoppers like claiming areas had been clear-felled when they hadn't and putting misleading captions on photographs. |
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How has all this misleading language become so dominant across the political spectrum? |
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In Australia, cinema-goers get to watch a McDonald's ad arguing that the film they are about to see is full of misleading distortions. |
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As I elucidated in the last section, misleading assumptions and dubious claims about western alienation abound. |
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It would be misleading to assert that a woodwind trio has a propensity for entertaining music rather than solid serious stuff. |
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To ask whether there are any human, or natural rights is to pose a potentially misleading question. |
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The judge held that each of the appellants was personally responsible for the misleading accounts. |
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This argument is misleading and cannot justify selectively disinheriting women. |
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Most characters also are coded as present or absent and these codings can sometimes be misleading. |
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Current legislation empowers the Financial Supervision Commission to sanction banks that use misleading advertisements. |
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There has always been a fine line between legitimate puffery and misleading advertising. |
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Mr Newton was not to know that the builder on his doorstep had a string of convictions for deception and misleading customers. |
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He says that the impression that wormseed oil is produced from a wild herb of that name is misleading. |
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Mr Carter said that these companies were not set up to defraud, but their publicity material could be misleading. |
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This claim is dated at best and truly misleading, given the other reports and citations referenced in the article. |
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However, manufacturers could be breaking the law if the information on labels is misleading to the public. |
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The authority stressed that the information contained on food labels should be clear, unambiguous and must not make misleading or false claims. |
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Basic payload figures are a little misleading, however, in view of differing fuel capacities. |
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Engraving is often described as a slow and laborious process, and its practitioners as drudges, but this is misleading. |
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They should not be fobbed off with a diet of misleading statements and official denials. |
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Today it announced the start of legal action alleging misleading and deceptive conduct. |
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It only appears here to give a misleading patina of bilingualism to my blog. |
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The panel concluded that four tests should immediately be withdrawn from sale as they were misleading and unreliable. |
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We do not know whether those statements were deliberately misleading or uninformed. |
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It also points out that year-on-year comparisons are misleading, as far less money was spent on marketing in the more recent circulation period. |
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Courts are rightly reluctant to judge what statements in political ads are merely misleading. |
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Stories go in and out of focus in the news, eventually hardening into history, and yet history can be misleading. |
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Much of the report is hard to read and contains many ambiguous or misleading statements. |
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The lavish praise is only possible because the book note is riddled with factual errors and misleading innuendo from start to finish. |
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As a result, the ad is highly misleading, as it rests on highly suspect premises. |
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Outcome surrogates must be carefully validated to avoid misleading results. |
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He lent himself to an illusion, he lent himself to misleading the African people. |
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Of course, when the likes of Miller reject God's propositional revelation in Scripture, they are misleading themselves. |
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The metal used was a soft soda lime glass, which in inclined to pitting and will give a misleading impression of age. |
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Percentages can be misleading, however-only three times since 1926 have more than 10 publications dealt with stromatoporoid paleoecology. |
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Strong claims in either direction are dangerous and misleading, as well as lacking in intellectual rigor. |
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The metaphor that likens the brain to a computer is misleading and in another discussion somewhere, sometime, I will tell you why that is. |
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The apparent juxtaposition of literati and merchant culture at opposite ends of the east wall is misleading. |
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That misleading signal might cue the body to slow metabolism, increase fat deposition, and overstimulate appetite. |
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If economic growth is a misleading term, productivity growth is even more so. |
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I think this statement is so oversimplified as to be dangerously misleading. |
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The question that Mr Justice Brownie had to decide is whether that was misleading or deceptive. |
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Nevertheless, Clark said he had an issue with what he felt was a misleading press release. |
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But Ms Cannings hit back, claiming the Yorkshire Post story had been misleading. |
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Life assurers could face a messy row over misleading customers unless they give a clearer picture of potential losses. |
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It was extraordinarily modest and at best misleading as to the First Lady's world view. |
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Instead of relying on a misleading label, simply avoid foods such as luncheon meat, cheese and whole milk that are naturally high in fat. |
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He has drawn misleading analogies about how the mind might be like a computer or a general-purpose learning device. |
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There was a hint of his own scent there as well but it was very faint and he wasn't at all sure his nose wasn't misleading him. |
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Perhaps I don't qualify because I refuse to take part in the GM fundamentalists' misleading rows. |
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In some respects the title of the book is misleading, because it seems to suggest that autocracy has ended and democracy has been enabled. |
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It can be just as misleading to be overexact, by insisting on distinctions finer than the context makes necessary, as to be careless. |
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This is inadequate and misleading because it depends on a crude kind of rationalism. |
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However, statistical findings are often presented in manuscripts submitted for publication in misleading or erroneous ways. |
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That is a completely misleading defence, given that that is quite outside the intended scope of the bill. |
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The medical information conveyed in these ads is fragmentary and sometimes misleading. |
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Supermarkets have been accused of cashing in on the organic food boom by misleading consumers over Scottish salmon. |
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Mr Manning, you appear to have your heart in the right place, but your advisers are misleading you. |
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They make some good points, some misleading points, and a few rather tendentious points. |
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Rather, they want to bamboozle students with enough false and misleading information to make them think that evolution is bad science. |
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While the report is critical of the intelligence services, it clears the British Prime Minister of misleading the public over the case for war. |
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But that doesn't explain Howard's continued refusal to do so or his barefaced and misleading claim that the convention doesn't require it. |
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Honestly and truthfully, I'd like to underline the point that your claim above is definitely baseless, misleading and untrue. |
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Linking the entertainment industry and violence is misleading, he said, and plays into election-year posturing. |
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These misleading perceptions are not helped by data on invisibles being less timely, frequent and certain than data on visible trade. |
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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. |
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However, the inferences based on conventional data sets could be quite misleading. |
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It is for this reason that the imagery of the 1990s as an interregnum is somewhat misleading. |
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The advertisements correspond very well with the government's overall intent and I can't see how it could be construed as misleading in any way. |
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Yet the trade deficit is a misleading gauge of the nation's economic health. |
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These leaders who are responsible for misleading the multitudes must carry the blame when an uncontrollable political upheaval ensues. |
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When words and processes are misleading, it is neither unchristian nor mean to ask for a higher standard. |
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This term is misleading, as the same risk factors may apply to first-class and business-class air travellers as well as travel by road and rail. |
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Indeed, a lot of the performances from the early 1990s give a misleading image of an arrogant American with a hefty streak of misanthropy. |
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Morphologic intermediacy can be misleading when determining if hybridization has occurred between two morphotypes. |
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Companies' accounts were misleading, their auditors conniving, their lawyers conspiring, their bankers inept. |
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The documents supplied by the banks gave unclear and misleading information, which resulted in borrowers misinterpreting the facts. |
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Indeed, the photographs and illustrations are often misleading, and frequently mislabelled as well. |
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The summit cone of Ben More is magnetic and compass readings can be misleading. |
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We learnt to be careful about our preconceived ideas misleading us, not making us critical enough. |
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In other words, he is innocent of intentionally misinforming or misleading the audience. |
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And he should stop misleading the American people with phony, inflated numbers. |
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One is that you are misleading the person who receives it, since you are representing it as a genuine bill. |
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Another serious allegation against him is one of misleading others, innocently or culpably, over the contract. |
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But it is well recognised that twin concordances may be misleading unless the underlying prevalence of a disease is taken into account. |
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Her gut told her everything was wrong, even the kind introductions just a misleading start. |
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Prospective candidates are fed misleading information about the organization to discourage them from pursuing their application. |
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Unfortunately, that translation, while perhaps the best available, is somewhat misleading. |
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They are, however, wrong in assuming that our paper gives a misleading message. |
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There are a number of misleading and just plain wrong stereotypes floating around about jazz. |
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Repeated in a new situation, the old formulations can often be misleading, as instanced by the examples of Baius and Jansenius in the seventeenth century. |
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Signs of character during this period can thus be very misleading. |
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Closed courthouses, rogue clerks, and misleading statements from the attorney general as Florida welcomes same-sex marriage. |
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Cold War fears could be manipulated through misleading art to attract readers to daunting material. |
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But to say the capital teeters on the verge of collapse is both melodramatic and misleading. |
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Hours later, came the admission that in a way they were misleading. |
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While all of these arguments contain a kernel of truth, close analysis shows that they are disingenuous at best and downright misleading at worst. |
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Teachers who hand out misleading grades thereby allow some students, already let down by a school system that has failed to prepare them adequately, to be blindsided. |
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As is customary in detective films, the film periodically withholds information, and indeed gives false clues in the form of misleading flashbacks. |
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Like a lot of great bookstores, on the outside, Green Apple is deceptively simple, humble, even misleading. |
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The disc case lists the runtime at 150 minutes, which is misleading. |
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Since customers would normally assume the meat is kosher, the defect must be revealed to all customers, even non-Jewish ones, to avoid misleading them. |
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It is therefore regrettable that you chose to print the article in its current form and under a misleading heading on the front page of your paper. |
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If he declines, you may ask and publish his reasons, but they cannot release you of your obligation to correct your error in publishing his misleading words. |
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This is misleading for everyone, and particularly offensive to those who have earned the honor of wearing their feathers. |
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The surface grammar of power locutions can be misleading in numerous ways. |
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I mean, we don't want to run off at the mouth, giving people misleading information and then finding we have to change it as we find something else out. |
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However, as the accessory or assister does not have to receive any trust property for this type of liability to arise, it seems misleading to describe him as a trustee at all. |
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Such isolated examples would be atypical and quite misleading. |
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Also misleading is the author's claim that Chopin was readily accepted in the Parisian salons as a social equal rather than being merely an entertainer. |
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The Office of Fair Trading has warned consumers to be on the lookout for personal loan mailshots which break the law by advertising misleading interest rates. |
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Testing pure fructose as a stand-in for high-fructose corn syrup, he argues, might therefore produce misleading results. |
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Technically true, but highly misleading in its insinuation that American jobs are being moved overseas. |
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When are we going to see the back of that thoroughly misleading statistic? |
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He has been called a medicine man, but that title is misleading. |
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It would be misleading to say that he is neutral as to the conflict between his desires, since this would suggest that he regards them as equally acceptable. |
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Calling Apartment 1A Kensington Palace an apartment is a just a teensy bit misleading. |
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It would be misleading to call this local sextet an orchestral pop band, despite their occasionally clean melodies and prominent trumpet and cello. |
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Thus reason, too, can be misused, misdirected, or misleading. |
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Working-class students struggle for identity amid a cacophony of misleading noise and misdirection in a world that seeks to misrepresent and marginalize them. |
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It is an offence to make a false or misleading statement about a property. |
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Day after day he sees vindictive, false and misleading media stories. |
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However, this impression of inevitability, I think, is quite misleading. |
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They also provide grossly misleading information on animal research. |
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You'd get a falling average price, but it would be very misleading. |
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So it was covered up by a deliberately misleading statement. |
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The mirth is misleading, as are the soft features of the baby-faced Surkov. |
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As David Leonhardt points out in The New York Times, these averages can be misleading. |
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Our money-back guarantee contains no fine print or misleading terms. |
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This perception of immediacy can he misleading, for interviews are highly contrived public performances, providing ample opportunity for self-promotion and blague. |
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When Lemerre said he could select two teams who would be among the finest around it was not the idle boast of a manager misleading himself about the assets at his disposal. |
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Another misleading gut feeling, he thought, bopping his head with a book. |
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This, coupled with misleading advertising and reams of small print, means that we usually end up with partial information as to its suitability, at best. |
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At best it was enormously misleading, and at worst it was untruthful. |
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The name is misleading, as this spider is native to the Waterloo region. |
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Using a non-transferable member's card without the knowledge of the management is a misleading practice and an unfair way of obtaining a discount. |
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Most of the rest of the interview is the same old canards, misleading talking points, ad hominems, undefined terms, self-contradictions, and so forth. |
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But this administration's outward certitude amid undisclosed intelligence-community doubts was more selective, and thus more misleading, than it needed to be. |
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Today, boiler rooms refer to unregulated companies that use high-pressure selling tactics to peddle dodgy shares by providing false or misleading information. |
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Alternatively, he would launch into misleading speeches on the customs of Sicilians and their hot-bloodedness which led them to react violently when offended. |
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This perversely sets a misleading path for tonight's proceedings. |
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He was found guilty of sexual harassment, making false mileage claims, giving false or misleading information to the club's marketing committee and gross incompetence. |
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Frankly, what the hapless visitors to the gallery are now being presented with is a farrago of contextless quotes, statements of belief and reports of misleading hearsay. |
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Given the inapplicability of statistical methods to macroscopic systems, it is true that associating entropy with the disorder of a room can be misleading. |
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Strange, then, that Moore himself indulges in misleading fearmongering. |
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This is without even bringing up the possibility that the results from the fake investigation could be very misleading to the point of causing inestimable harm. |
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I have to say that I think the name of this film is somewhat misleading. |
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It is probably time to accept that raw taxonomic counts provide only a first, crude estimate of biodiversity dynamics and occasionally may be downright misleading. |
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Such remarks are not inaccurate or misleading, because the intelligence business does often deal with fuzziness and frequently relies on informed guesswork. |
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I won't say it was revenge exactly, but it was almost like a way of getting back at all the misleading books that had sent me down blind alleys over Shakespeare. |
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The title in itself is a little misleading, for this delectation produced for our viewing pleasure is neither about love nor does it appear to have celebrities! |
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Is my use of the term in that sense misleading or dishonest? |
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It can be casually entertaining, dull but compelling because of its authorship or outrageously challenging an equivocatory, apologetic or blatantly misleading editorial. |
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In addition, the chosen information was often misleading or erroneous. |
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At best it is naive, but at worst it is misleading and at times erroneous. |
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Its use can also be misleading as it may erroneously imply that a real medical alternative exists. |
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Is it not as misleading to apply a simple numbers game to the Civil Service as it is to the police? |
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However, misleading results are produced if the index fossils turn out to have longer fossil ranges than first thought. |
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Historically, the term shire is somewhat misleading, as it must not be confused with an English county. |
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He had received misleading information about an army coming to meet him south of Derby. |
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Letters sent home by the expedition created a misleading impression that everything was going according to plan. |
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It is dangerously misleading to suggest, as Allison and Nunn often do, that HEU is the bomb material of choice for would-be nuclear terrorists. |
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Najder warns that this approach produces an incoherent and misleading picture. |
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It is misleading because it elides the larger issue of xenophobia and anti-Muslim bias. |
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All that pettifoggery was rendered moot on the evening of November 7, when the president kinda-sorta apologized for misleading the country. |
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All this propaganda aims at diabolizing the Syrian government and misleading public opinion. |
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Chrimes regard as misleading, as the Acts were concerned with harmonising laws, not political union. |
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He also warned youth against retweeting the misleading propaganda tweets of the deviants on social networking sites. |
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First, the identification of the predicates which allow that-deletion with the predicates which allow complement preposing is misleading. |
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The name, let me forewarn you, can be misleading, for the burger patty does not have any daal. |
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The notion that magnetic disk capacity would outpace tape is also misleading. |
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He says Reidenberg and Laitman use misleading measures that mask the close resemblance of the fossil to modern human hyoids. |
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To describe that as misleading is, ironically, itself misleading. |
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Messier is currently on trial in Paris on charges of misleading investors. |
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For its part, Illovo Sugar believes that the Sweet Nothings report is inaccurate and misleading. |
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Official Mormon histories about Joseph Smith may have been misleading. |
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The different foliations of the codex have led to certain problems and misleading references. |
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Factorial analysis of variance can be very misleading in drug combination studies. |
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In fact, in May of 1998, the Gao declared the OIG report was misleading. |
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Firstly, comparing grade 1 enrolments to the number passing matric 12 years later is significantly misleading. |
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His ignorant, misleading, populist scaremongering risks us missing out on the biggest opportunity to return powers to the regions in my lifetime. |
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James, it seems, was misleading readers with her depiction of Anastasia Steele, the heroine of her sadomasochist trilogy. |
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Looking at New York City as a discrete economic unit can be misleading. |
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The Revisor of Statutes has authority under the joint rules to correct inaccurate, generalized or misleading bill titles. |
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The referendum questions are explained as somewhat misleading, and that the package is somewhat laborous. |
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In other words, the TPFR is a misleading measure of life cycle fertility when childbearing age is changing, due to this statistical artifact. |
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For hydrides other than group 1 and 2 metals, the term is quite misleading, considering the low electronegativity of hydrogen. |
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The map can be misleading. It can appear to contain all the relevant information, but in real life, there is always an X factor. |
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However, the term snap trap is preferred as other designations are misleading, particularly with respect to the intended prey. |
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This name may be misleading since the only trees form the windbreak of Skiddaw House. |
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The term child labour can be misleading when it confuses harmful work with employment that may be beneficial to children. |
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However, some have argued that as relative poverty is merely a measure of inequality, using the term 'poverty' for it is misleading. |
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To suggest this as anything other than natural is a bit of a misleading argument. |
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These names are a bit misleading, as hardwoods are not necessarily hard, and softwoods are not necessarily soft. |
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As the casualties of the Iraq War mounted, Blair was accused of misleading Parliament, and his popularity dropped dramatically. |
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In 2011, several law schools were sued for fraud and for misleading job placement statistics. |
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Some legal scholars consider inquisitorial misleading, and prefer the word nonadversarial. |
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Many modern scholars avoid the term altogether due to its negative connotations, finding it misleading and inaccurate. |
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Hence the very term phrasal verb is misleading and a source of confusion, which has motivated some to reject the term outright. |
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He chose not to identify the hospital, and indeed was deliberately misleading about its location. |
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In addition, an ultrasound procedure can distinguish between pregnancy and misleading physical conditions, or between a live and dead fetus. |
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However, the commonly held idea that Japan was entirely closed is misleading. |
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He addresses points directly, without flowery or misleading language, and quotes from his sources often. |
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Lapland can be either misleading or offensive, or both, depending on the context and where this word is used, to the Sami. |
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Issues such as obstructions and misleading signs are usually reported by members of the public and then are dealt with by the local authority. |
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Some intercepts decoded during the action had taken two hours to reach British commanders at sea, by when they were out of date or misleading. |
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However, this is misleading, as it was a villainous character in one of Thomas' short stories that spoke this line. |
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Those of us who didn't want OBHWF felt that Rowling was making a mistake, not that she was being misleading. |
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Necessary as they are, genre classifications are misleading in their oversimplification of the subject area. |
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Sometimes that attaches itself to misleading history and misaimed anger. |
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It is misleading to capitalize the minimum lease payments of true lease small-ticket assets with a short lease term that may be replaced by a new lease again and again. |
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When you have such an enormously influential group peddling misleading information, it's going to lead to skewed regulations and skewed standards for cleanup,'' she said. |
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Kentucky drawl was misleading I WAS strolling through a favourite Caernarvonshire holiday resort of mine recently when a long glittering Chevrolet drew up. |
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We haven't got the time or energy to discuss the scheming, buck-passing, misleading and plain ignorance that has got FIFA in this mess in the first place. |
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Moreover, worldwide ELISA testing with a single antigen such as SNV or Puumala virus can result in misleading cross-reactions, since both viruses are genetically related. |
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As a result, much of the misleading and vivid detail was removed from the scholarly series of events, even if it remained in the popular accounts. |
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I am not suggesting, however, that distastefulness should mean that the video should be suppressed or that its misleading attributes ought to call forth any sanctions. |
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Some of his pamphlets were purported to be written by Scots, misleading even reputable historians into quoting them as evidence of Scottish opinion of the time. |
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Again, it seems to me that this fantastic formulation is highly misleading in that it seems to suggest that the locative case is identical to the nominative. |
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Doug Brown, President of 37Point9 announced today a unique program to eliminate bashing and misleading information posted by individuals known as bashers. |
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Alternative medicine is criticized for being based on misleading statements, quackery, pseudoscience, antiscience, fraud, or poor scientific methodology. |
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The term Calvinism can be misleading, because the religious tradition which it denotes has always been diverse, with a wide range of influences rather than a single founder. |
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Most importantly, he argued this could be achieved by use of a sceptical and methodical approach whereby scientists aim to avoid misleading themselves. |
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Monkeys at USAMRIID research facilities have been infected, but tests on animals that are artificially infected with a human disease may give false or misleading results. |
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The Complaint alleges that such false and misleading statements by defendants operated artificially to inflate Network Associate's stock price during the class period. |
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The high proportion of jack pines selected for nests may be misleading as a majority of nests located in the burn were in stands dominated by mature jack pine. |
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Subsequent writings by Greenberg analogize the 1947-50 drip paintings to high Analytical Cubist works by Picasso and Braque, in my view a brilliant but misleading comparison. |
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Claims such as 'dermatologically tested' on cosmetics, toiletries and some washing powders are confusing and potentially misleading, a consumer magazine said today. |
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Although many of these contributions were supporting the Malaysia Deal as policy, they were not relying on misleading and misrepresentative language to do so. |
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Although the RAF succeeded in preventing the Luftwaffe from interfering with the shipping, which was its primary aim, its perceived success was misleading. |
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