Well, duped is too strong a word for it, but mislead seems a bit, well, too innocent. |
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The report did not give a grossly unfair impression of the hospital and his letter only serves to mislead the public again. |
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Argute sayings are far removed from the acute, and indeed, the acute teach, the argute mislead. |
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Mr Byers did not accept that he intended to mislead the Transport sub-Committee. |
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Public education and the media mislead us into thinking America is a just and fair country. |
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Such a letter is calculated to mislead, purposely or otherwise, those who are not familiar with Bradford City or its metropolitan area. |
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To the extent that you reduce fear, you reduce the emotional need among your people to mislead you. |
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One lesson he had learned from arguing against idealism is that the surface grammar of language can mislead us about the meaning of what we say. |
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I used to lie and I still lie really, not to mislead anybody but to entertain people. |
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What that tells me is that right now, whatever is being reported could be information to deceive and mislead people. |
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The apparent inconsistency should not be interpreted as ignorance or a deliberate attempt to mislead. |
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Secondly did it mislead the prosecution into thinking the case against him was stronger than it was. |
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Other men are deceived by wives who bear children through adulterous liaisons and who mislead them into thinking that the children are theirs. |
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The brick wall is approaching, and they merrily say things to mislead the Bahamian public. |
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There is another haste that does often and will mislead the mind, if it be left to itself and its own conduct. |
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Omissions are not calculated to mislead and do not effect the substance of the certificate. |
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I'm worried that the strange lyrics paint a wrong picture of what life is and mislead young people. |
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The mathematical possibilities, the permutations and combinations, the percentages, all tended to mislead a good number of readers. |
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All this only scratches the surface of the ways schools use statistics to mislead parents and the public. |
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Accomplished liars will beat polygraphs, mislead interrogators, and hoodwink the most sophisticated security regime. |
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It said the councillor was not seeking to mislead other members or act in a devious manner. |
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Often the mainstream media have done more to mislead than to inform the public on the issues behind the protests. |
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Could they be brought to account to the people if they mislead our public service? |
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That is a phrase which, in our respectful submission, is also apt to mislead, it being an elliptical noun phrase. |
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They create divisions and discord, mislead, confuse, and worst of all, stifle the opposition. |
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But when it comes to the relation between sense and reference, the analogy could mislead. |
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Sponge does not actively mislead Maxwell, the parties are dealing at arm's length and are not, for example, in a fiduciary relationship where disclosure would be necessary. |
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If Uber did actually mislead its customers, it should certainly be held responsible. |
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Magnetic storms can damage power systems and pipelines, whilst the changes in the magnetic field can mislead any navigational systems that use magnetic compasses. |
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However, it is unacceptable to misinform your troops going into battle or mislead your citizens about why you are putting their sons and daughters in harm's way. |
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They even publicly show false numbers to mislead readers and advertisers. |
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To suggest that we, rather like some ungrateful children, don't want the new leisure centre in South Norwood is to deliberately mislead and distort our argument. |
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We give students copies of opinion columns from local newspapers and national newsmagazines that mislead readers about education in the United States. |
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To mislead the enemy as to the direction of the main strike, staging areas, forward movement, and second echelon deployment lines can be simulated. |
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Justifying government policies on the basis of paternalism is just one of many analogies used to mislead people about their true nature and effects. |
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His evidence not only flatly contradicted the testimony of the other defendants, it implicated the top echelons of the football club in a conspiracy to mislead the court. |
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Hon. members simply cannot get up in the House and mislead Canadians, and mislead the Chamber and be in error on this issue. |
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Parakelius mislead the people in Andaron with his maliciousness and convinced them to join the Reign of the Shadows. |
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It detailed how one official sent on secondment to head the Bookend research team planned to mislead his staff about its remit. |
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Mr Sharon is now trying to create a smoke screen to mislead the world and make people forget the Geneva peace initiative. |
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An unenforced Rule may exhort an occasional naïve or exceptionally moral person, but will mislead or trick many more. |
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This includes in my view the responsibility not to mislead them into believing that there are magic solutions to a very difficult problem. |
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I don't want to mislead in the sense that I can see the possibility of misreading our intentions. |
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Just another electioneering pack of lies designed to mislead people into enabling yet a further layer of politicians to line their pockets at our expense. |
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Politicians are keen to draw up new rules to ensure that mortgage companies do not mislead or mistreat naive borrowers. |
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As a result, using the language of war may only serve to frustrate and mislead the public. |
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It is also prohibited to use laudatory wordings that could mislead the consumer. |
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Indications may be used which refer to privately owned brands or names, provided they are not laudatory or are such as to mislead the consumer. |
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These aids should not be used to deceive, mislead or misrepresent the qualities or value of a product. |
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Why did the former human resources minister mislead the House when she knew the Prime Minister had swiped the cash? |
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But getting there requires a daily struggle against those who would mislead us. |
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Therefore, because the subscription fee was not detailed in the ad, we concluded that the ad was likely to mislead. |
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There is a lot of potential there, but it can also mislead consumers because of accidental contamination. |
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I am nonetheless satisfied that the lack of detail does not mislead the reader about what occurred. |
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Injecting this fact that anybody would deliberately try to mislead people when it comes to the use of firearms is detrimental to the debate. |
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It covers, in particular, that they present no risk to the health of the consumer and that their use does not mislead the consumer. |
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They were separated in an attempt to mislead their families into believing that they would not suffer the same fate as the others. |
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Japan should be clear about whether it intended to acknowledge those crimes or continue to mislead the international community. |
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To be able to sell this batch, it will have added markings intended to mislead the customer! |
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Fraudsters who want to take advantage of people and corporations are always trying to find ways to mislead consumers. |
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Information contained in such documents must be full, factual and without intent to mislead. |
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She claims that the PGT did not act on her behalf and tried to mislead her. |
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Summary: The opposition to salmon farming is attempting to mislead the public and harm the reputation of the salmon farming community. |
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Did he mislead Parliament when he denied he had ever lobbied in favor of the BSkyB bid? |
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We should also note that the IDF has several good reasons to mislead the world about the effectiveness of Iron Dome. |
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I believe this law heralds the beginning of the end of the con merchants and the dodgy dealers who dupe and mislead our consumers. |
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The many apologists of the god gospellers have had many centuries in the common era to hone their craft of deception and have mislead millions of people. |
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The marketing for the film was designed to intentionally mislead viewers into believing that it was based on a true story. |
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We refuse to mislead our readers, and diminish the endeavors of our top athletes, by showcasing anabolic steroids as the number-one way to get big. |
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For reasons of both credibility and management control it is important that indicators do not create a false impression or mislead the intended audience. |
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I would like to place a benign interpretation on those words rather than a malign one, because they are open to the interpretation that I am attempting to mislead Parliament. |
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Yet if he had come clean about his decisions to go to war, if he had not mislead the international community on his motives, we would not be seeing a unanimous dragging of heels when it comes to intervention in Syria. |
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If you use any methods to mislead the search engines, your page is marked as webspam. |
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In no way did the governor intend to mislead the sheriffs or anyone else. |
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It might also mislead people about what problems are most pressing. |
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In addition, for an offence of perjury to exist, there must be proof of a false declaration or statement made under oath or solemn declaration with the intent to mislead. |
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Mr. Speaker, the Conservatives have mislead new immigrants by having them believe that they would quickly resolve the matter of recognizing foreign credentials. |
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But that must not mislead us into saying everything has been done, the matter has been dealt with, we can just hang around and everything will turn out well. |
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They continue to attack our ideas and misinform and mislead Canadians as opposed to having meaningful dialogue and debate on the substantive matters of our policy proposals. |
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Publication of every failure to comply with privacy requirements could have an unjustified but significant and negative effect on that business' reputation and could in fact mislead consumers. |
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Yet this right also goes hand in hand with a duty, the duty to provide honest information in an effort to explain or teach, to convince, but not to mislead. |
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Ignoring this simultaneity in estimation and inference is likely to mislead conclusions and produce flawed counterfactual analyses. |
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Such an approach is useful where the registry takes time to actually register the security right in the patent or trademark, but may mislead a searcher as to whether specific intellectual property is encumbered. |
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Adding this ingredient seems to have been common practice by suppliers of a least twenty manufacturers of dairy products and baby formulas to mislead quality controls. |
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Scotiabankers must not knowingly mislead customers, the general public or other employees by making false or misleading statements or by withholding information. |
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However, Aristotle's scientific shortcomings should not mislead one into forgetting his great advances in the many scientific fields. |
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Counsel shall not deceive or knowingly mislead the Court. |
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As usual, their ambivalent attitude may mislead good-intended players into thinking that the game is now fair while letting loose the evil side of power mongers. |
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In addition, it is unlawful to fraudulently influence, coerce, manipulate or mislead any independent public or certified accountant who is auditing our financial statements. |
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The title of an act shall give as succinct and full an indication as possible of the subject matter which does not mislead the reader as to the content of the enacting terms. |
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This is the crucial point, and I hope members opposite are listening to this, because this is a fact that may assist them as they continue to pontificate and mislead through the day. |
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It acts as a fig leaf of democratic respectability, designed to mislead the people of Europe into thinking that they have some say in the management of the so-called European project. |
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These pseudo-referencers generally use Black Hat SEO or spamdexing techniques to mislead search engines and improve your positioning artificially. |
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They mislead cancer patients, who are encouraged not only to pay their last penny but to be treated with something that shortens their lives. |
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A variety denomination may not mislead or cause confusion concerning the characteristics, value or identity of the variety or the identity of the breeder. |
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I have tried to follow the debate as best I can and I am disappointed that there has been some fairly wilful attempt to misconstrue, or perhaps even mislead, in relation to previous electoral commitments. |
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It is critically important that we do not misinform, misjudge or mislead and that accurate, disease-preventing and life-saving information and means reach all people in all countries, especially young women and children. |
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The sound of the words knows that it has no choice but to beguile, because objects deceive with their materials, and feelings mislead with their gestures. |
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One reason, say churchmen, is that a minaret on the skyline might mislead first-time visitors. The Peania centre would be financed by the Saudi government. |
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A sea lawyer is one who uses semantics, parsing of words, wordplay and other tricks of language in an attempt to mislead someone as to the truth. |
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I am sure the member who represents the community would not want to mislead, in any way, people who come through the border crossing who want to engage in sports fishing and want to have the truth of the matter. |
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When one reads this type of document, one can see that its sole purpose is to sully the reputation of innocent people, namely members of the House, to score political points and to use public funds to mislead the public. |
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The opposition is not free to somehow mislead Canadians or the House that Parliament can ignore these court decisions and re-enact the same law that has already been declared unconstitutional. |
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Additional information may be given in another field of vision, provided this is not of a laudatory nature and does not mislead the consumer as to the nature and characteristics of the product. |
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Primarily, he wonders whether they mislead people by oversimplifying the case, or the following generations have failed them. |
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The names of undertakings, holdings and estates, business names and brand names may not have laudatory connotations, nor may they mislead the consumer. |
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It is forbidden to add to the PDO any description that is not expressly provided for, though business and brand names may be used, on condition that they have no laudatory purport and are not such as to mislead the purchaser. |
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Yes, it is also a measure of the relationship of the Commission to this Parliament that we demand complete openness, the full truth and not half-truths or statements which mislead. |
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However, the use of indications referring to companies, names, business names and private trademarks which are not laudatory in nature and are not likely to mislead the purchaser are permitted. |
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Reference may however be made to undertakings, names, company names, brand names and associations provided that laudatory wordings that could mislead the consumer are not used. |
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The appearance of the Plaid Cymru leader, Leanne Wood, on last week's UK-wide televised leaders' debate, where she deservedly won applause for a doughty duffing of Nigel Farage, should not be allowed to mislead either. |
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Saskatchewan media has chastised my colleagues from Saskatchewan for their lack of action to stand up for Saskatchewan, for trying to mislead Saskatchewan with irrational numbers which I heard today. |
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This may yield artifactually elevated values and mislead the inexperienced clinician. |
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No Director may directly or indirectly take any action to fraudulently influence, coerce, manipulate or mislead CIBC's independent external auditors for the purpose of rendering CIBC's financial statements misleading. |
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All the art of rhetoric, besides order and clearness, are for nothing else but to insinuate wrong ideas, move the passions, and thereby mislead the judgment. |
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According to Nickell, peripheral vision can easily mislead, especially late at night when the brain is tired and more likely to misinterpret sights and sounds. |
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As a consequence, many documents that could reach other European countries included fake dates and faked facts, to mislead any other nation's possible efforts. |
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