Sentence examples for a misinterpretation in from inspiring English sources

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These fanatical calls to pure death are a misinterpretation in any religion and are the product of selfish, maladjusted notions that devalue life and its worth.

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It's often a misinterpretation made in innocent ignorance, I'm sure.

Although Zombie has added more history to the Michael Myers character, hence creating more original content for the film, he chose to keep the character's trademark mask and Carpenter's theme song intact for his version (despite an apparent misinterpretation in an interview suggesting the theme would be ditched).

Wobisch's nefarious activities "did not become known in the denazification process," the report says, but he "tried to hide his Nazi traces, even using Jewish musicians like the well-known conductor Leonard Bernstein, who again denazified him by calling Wobisch 'my dearest Nazi' according to eyewitnesses — in retrospect a horrifying misinterpretation in Bernstein's humanitarian position".

He added: "We are now in contact with Stonewall to discuss their concerns and will of course amend the policy to avoid any misinterpretation in  the future".

These secondary structures may therefore compete with the intended target for effective probe annealing in a microarray experiment, resulting in a misinterpretation of the amount of target present in the sample.

However, some genes are frequently present as larger paralogous families in microbes, and thus blindly applying the reciprocal GOS hits indicated in Table  1 would result in a misinterpretation of the selection pressure for certain detoxification systems in that particular environment.

A platitude because traces of folk music are found everywhere, in Haydn, in Chopin, in Liszt, in Brahms; a misinterpretation because Smetana's two quartets are actually a highly personal musical confession, written under tragic circumstances the composer had just lost his hearing, and these (splendid!) quartets are, he said, "the swirling storm of music in the head of a man gone deaf".

A platitude because traces of folk music are found everywhere, in Haydn, in Chopin, in Liszt, in Brahms; a misinterpretation because Smetana's two quartets are actually a highly personal musical confession, written under tragic circumstances — the composer had just lost his hearing, and these (splendid!) quartets are, he said, "the swirling storm of music in the head of a man gone deaf".

The opening sentence of the article and the headline were based on a misinterpretation of a passage in her speech in which she first referred to the Democrats' agenda in the Senate and then went on to criticize the actions of the Republican majority in Congress.

However, the difference in length may be a misinterpretation based on crushing in a top bottom plane, and the possession of a beak is considered unlikely in recent studies.

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