Similar words: mislead, leading, reading, subheading, lading, fading, trading, evading. Meaning: [mɪs'lɪːdɪŋ] adj. designed to deceive or mislead either deliberately or inadvertently.
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91. The documents included allegedly misleading sales material and records from individual customers' files.
92. Thirdly, and most significantly, the Act creates two offences relating to misdescriptions of goods, and misleading statements about services.
93. Travel companies have strongly denied that they are deliberately misleading customers.
94. Unfortunately appearances has been misleading and heavy filling was found as they started to take it to bits.
95. The level and quality of public debate generated by rightwing newspapers have been risible and misleading.
96. However, this result may be misleading, as two of those commenting on Buss's data have suggested.
97. A new general offence of giving a misleading price indication is provided in s20.
98. Wickham had remarked that covert freelance writing for another publication did not justify making a misleading statement during a murder inquiry.
99. The misleading ordinariness and eerie implacability of the flesh-eaters bring the terror much closer to home.
100. I got howls of protest from readers who thought that I was deliberately misleading them.
101. Voters' trade-off between taxes and services has changed since 1979 - and anyway the folk wisdom was always misleading.
102. What is misleading is the idea that Mr Bush will be able to recede into the background.
103. Nor is he entitled to examine proceedings in Parliament in order to show that the appellants by fraudulently misleading Parliament caused him loss.
104. It is also misleading because it is thought to be unhistorical and untrue.
105. Conclusions drawn from applying statistical techniques to incomplete data may be very misleading.
106. He maintains that their image as a bunch of violent thugs is a misleading byproduct of a sustained media campaign.
107. They claimed it was inaccurate, misleading and constituted a breach of journalistic ethics.
108. A number of misleading claims are made by companies suggesting that their products are environmentally friendly when clearly they are not.
109. Whilst we stress the artificial nature of most time-cues, it would be misleading to suggest that natural light is without effect.
110. Editor's Note: The report was misleading in suggesting Mr Bacon's remarks were made at the inquiry.
111. Mr Irons and Sheriff Nicholson believe the court's decision was based on misleading information.
112. But this is only part of the story and can be very misleading.
113. None the less to equate female and male violence is misleading.
114. It is misleading if it means simply that students learn how to acquire conventional encyclopaedia-like knowledge for themselves.
115. Agents often gave a false or misleading description of the houses they were selling.
116. Ford did not admit any liability for the misleading advertising.
117. The first is somewhat misleading; the second is certainly wrong; and the third, unduly pessimistic.
117. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
118. It is sometimes called the Coriolis force, but this is very misleading.
119. The popular belief is that saturated fat is animal fat, but this is a misleading generalization.
120. We spend far too little time on the packaging of change for fear of misleading people.
More similar words: mislead, leading, reading, subheading, lading, fading, trading, evading, masquerading, bill of lading, misunderstanding, isle, aisle, paisley, sleazy, readily, lead, steadily, plead, unsteadily, leader, lead to, misread, ad infinitum, lead time, lead up to, take the lead, leadership, readmission, make a difference.