39 adverbs to describe how to misleading

"The attitude of the British in the face of this attack was cool and the enemy was utterly misled when suddenly the cruiser Birmingham, steaming at full speed, fired the first shot.

Hence was it that the partisans of the opposite system were strangely misled, by founding their calculation on false data, when they alleged that a substitute, equivalent to the increased revenue supposed to arise out of the monopoly of tobacco, might have been resorted to by ordering a proportionate rise in the branch of tributes.

But when it came to the WCT strike, I have always held the belief that a man of such calibre who could have easily placated the agitated workers and even broken their Union, was somehow carried away with the opinion of one trusted man, who was obviously misleading him and since I've named names, I will exclude Madkaikar and Kurwar.]

Not only so, but he deliberately misled Captain Bastard, the commander of a small English squadron which had been stationed at Bastia to intercept Murat in the event of his embarking for the purpose of regaining his throne at Naples.

The two Bills [Sir Robert Peel's in 1846 and the Bill of 1847] were so entirely different that to call them by a common name, though perhaps inevitable, is also inevitably misleading" ("History of Modern England," Herbert Paul, vol.

"You are continually misled in this way unless you refer at every minute to your guide-book, and to go through Europe reading a guide-book which you can read at home seems to be a waste of time.

How wildly and mischievously has she been heretofore misled!

During the first part of his stay at Bauerbach Schiller went by the name of Dr. Ritter and wrote purposely misleading letters as to his intended movements.

To a stranger they will either give no information at all, pleading entire ignorance, or they will wilfully mislead him, putting him on a totally wrong track.

"We are mortals, subject to error; especially where religious matters are concerned, we often allow ourselves to be grossly misled by passion.

How wildly and mischievously has she been heretofore misled!

To-day, however, it is altogether inadequate, and sometimes, it is to be feared, positively misleading.

How wildly and mischievously has she been heretofore misled!

If we inquire of those who have gone before us, we receive small satisfaction; some have travelled life without observation, and some willingly mislead us.

Aware that with such women man's vanity misleads him woefully, and aware that she was equally awake to this masculine weakness, he wondered, afraid even to guess, telling himself he were an ass to believe, a fool to deny....

The eye of childhood is wonderfully misled in that matter.

But unfortunately these figures have little significance in connection with such an inquiry, if indeed they are not badly misleading.

Yet it is easily proved to be nothing more or less than a perniciously sensational newspaper production, too utterly false, too cruelly misleading, to merit credence.

The statement was entirely and fatally misleading.

And he protested that her style was faultless but that her matter was grossly misleading.

'A Spanish official told me that the census figures were notoriously misleading.

Language alone is proverbially misleading as a guide to identity of race.

If Miss Lind entertains any sentiment for me but one of mistrust and aversion, her behavior is singularly misleading.

I left England with a fermentation of art ideas in my brain, in which the influence of Turner and Pyne, the teachings of Wehnert, and the work of the Pre-Raphaelites mingled with the influence of Ruskin, and especially the preconception of art work derived from the descriptions, often strangely misleading, of the "Modern Painters.

But if the houses were not, in themselves, particularly inviting, their names were pleasing enough, although, truth to tell, a trifle misleading.

39 adverbs to describe how to  misleading  - Adverbs for  misleading