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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a mislead" is not correct in written English.
The correct term is "misleading" when referring to something that causes someone to have a wrong idea or impression.
Example: "The advertisement was a mislead, making consumers believe the product was more effective than it actually is."
Alternatives: "a deception" or "a false impression".
Exact(1)
So don't think that the assistant to someone you named in your claim or even more damaging a mislead gossipy subordinate throwing back a few at the Irish bar around the corner is not discussing the buzz-worthy charges put forth by you.
Similar(59)
U.S. ACCOUNTING RULEMAKERS HAVE gone halfway to curbing a misleading accounting maneuver we exposed a month ago.
G.O., CANADA Should someone submit a misleading résumé with impunity?
He later called Marxism a "misleading mental addiction".
The housing minister at the time, Kris Hopkins, criticised her report as a "misleading Marxist diatribe".
Intra-habitat natural variability, in fact, causes a misleading qualitative interpretation of small-scale biodiversity distribution.
Given that a simple regression line takes a misleading downward slope, it is not drawn.
"Public interest" appears to be a bit of a misleading phrase.
A misleading bath salts bag, packaged in a way to circumvent laws in Mississippi.
Captain Obvious now thinks USC's opening 52-13 win over Fresno State was a misleading movie trailer.
But calling it a cloud service is a tad misleading.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com