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Discover LudwigThe phrase "be misled to" is correct and usable in written English
You can use it when you want to describe a situation in which someone is convinced or tricked to make a decision they would not have made otherwise. For example, "The gullible couple were misled to sign a contract they didn't understand."
Exact(10)
"People who are not in on the joke may be misled to the point of assuming that certain services are available when they're not".
In Canada, the call would eventually be routed to another long distance carrier like AT&T that would be misled to believe that the call originated in Canada.
"In this turbulent election cycle, there might be some things that voters would be misled to vote for and not understand the consequences," said Dan Hopkins, a spokesman for Coloradans for Responsible Reform, a coalition of business and labor groups opposed to the measures.
Partly because many writers on distributive justice tend to advocate their particular principles by describing or considering ideal societies operating under them, some readers may be misled to believe that discussions of distributive justice are merely exercises in ideal theory.
While successful in deterministic settings, the application of NM to simulation optimization suffers from two problems: (1) It lacks an effective sample size scheme for controlling noise; consequently the algorithm can be misled to the wrong direction because of noise, and (2) it is a heuristic algorithm; the quality of estimated optimal solution cannot be quantified.
Detailed study demonstrates that this "first waiting period" during E13.5 to E14.5 involves Sema3E/PlexinD1 signaling, without which (mutations of Sema3E −/− or PlexinD1 −/−) the CT axons would be misled to the globus pallidus (GP) or the cerebral peduncle (CP), a corticosubcerebral axons (CSA -like trajeCSA -likeginatrajectorylayer V.
Similar(50)
It would plainly be misleading to call it total.
It would be misleading to say that South Africa before 1994 was not a democracy.
But it would be misleading to portray him as the political world's very own John McCririck.
Yet it would be misleading to pin everything on delivery, however poor it may be.
That said, it would be misleading to suggest that a geisha never had sex.
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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