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The phrase "She misspelled" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when referring to a situation in which a person has incorrectly spelled a word. For example, "She misspelled the word 'receive' as 'recieve'."
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She was caught, finally, when she misspelled the signature of one of her victims.
The adorable eleven-year-old Laura Newcombe nearly broke my heart when she misspelled "confiserie," but I wouldn't wish for it to be spelled "confeezree".
A 9-year-old girl left a comment on one of Dunham's posts calling her a "w***e", although she misspelled the insult.
After winning the Long Island championship two years ago, Joy landed in seventh place in national competition when she misspelled the word "lacertilian," a kind of lizard.
Last time she tried typing a speech on to a computer from scratch, and she misspelled the word "aspirational" and couldn't work out how to undo it, and she had to throw the entire computer in the bin.
She called herself "ratchet" (a term for someone who is, as Urban Dictionary puts it, "out of hand, out of control"), but spelt it "ratchit", just as she misspelled the name of Avicii, the young producer with whom she was working.
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Unfortunately, she misspells my last name.
She misspells the name of the painter Syd Solomon.
He said: "For instance, she misspells the name of my 'glossy haired' secretary, who is not my special assistant.
In Laura's scribbled margin notes to Rose — points of fact about geography — she misspells definite as "deffinite" and remarks that her husband "don't remember" the distance between two towns).
(The four pages of manuscript that he reproduces arouse more questions than they settle, however. In Laura's scribbled margin notes to Rose — points of fact about geography — she misspells definite as "deffinite" and remarks that her husband "don't remember" the distance between two towns).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com