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Discover Ludwig"gross misinformation" is a correct and usable term in written English
It is often used to refer to information that is either intentionally or unintentionally false or misleading. For example, "The article spread gross misinformation about the state of the economy."
Exact(5)
There's no doubt that Iraqi media are extremely partisan, and that Sunni and Shia stations often indulge in gross misinformation to stoke sectarian tensions.
Author David Bennett observes that Montgomery had almost certainly been fed gross misinformation that supported his own prejudices.
This Somers devotee makes for good comedy, but propagates gross misinformation about hormones and menopause management options.
Depending on where you've been getting your facts on this disease, you may be operating on some gross misinformation.
Continuing to counter the far right's gross misinformation is necessary – the predatory trans woman is a zombie fiction: wash, rinse, repeat – and when it's done with some flair, it's also oh-so satisfying.
Similar(55)
Mr. Tsarnaev: It's complete misinformation.
These types of gross omissions and misinformation played a huge role in contributing to generations of ignorance about real African American contributions to history.
No gross error or misinformation was found.
This has created confusion and fear of the religion of Islam and its 1.6 billion followers based on misinformation, half-truths, and gross negligence.
A university spokesperson said there was "misinformation" on their removal, adding it was for "gross misconduct".
Putnam: Misinformation?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com