Parole in English per 'Alternative form of misnaged.'
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noun
- An incorrect use of a term, especially one which is misleading; a misname.
- (law) A mistake in the naming of a person or place; a misidentification.
- A term which is misleading, even if firmly established, technically correct, or both.
- (nonstandard, proscribed) Something which is asserted not to be true; a mistaken belief, a falsehood, a myth.
- an incorrect or unsuitable name
verb
verb
- To misrepresent.
- To counterfeit; to forge.
- (sciences, otherwise archaic) To prove to be false.
- (accounting) To show (an item of charge inserted in an account) to be wrong.
- To alter so as to make false; especially when done with intent to deceive.
- make false by mutilation or addition; as of a message or story
- falsify knowingly
- prove false
- insert words into texts, often falsifying it thereby
- tamper, with the purpose of deception
verb
noun
adj
noun
- (informal) A person who assumes an identity or quality other than their own.
- (informal) Anything fraudulent or fake.
- (informal) A person who professes beliefs or opinions that they do not hold.
- a person who professes beliefs and opinions that he or she does not hold in order to conceal his or her real feelings or motives
verb
noun
- (slang) A phony.
- (slang, African-American Vernacular) A fraud; a scam.
- The shell or husk, especially of grains (e.g. corn/maize) or nuts (e.g. walnuts).
- (European folklore) A supernatural and generally malevolent black dog in English folklore.
- material consisting of seed coverings and small pieces of stem or leaves that have been separated from the seeds
verb
- (dialectal, of a horse) To walk at a slow trot.
- (transitive, intransitive, slang) To fool; to hoax.
- (dialectal) To shake; shiver.
- (transitive) To remove (any outer covering).
- (dialectal) To do hurriedly or in a restless way.
- (dialectal) To slither or slip, move about, wriggle.
- (computing, slang, transitive) To remove (an external hard drive or solid-state drive) from its casing so that it can be used inside another device.
- (transitive) To remove the shuck from (walnuts, oysters, etc.).
- (dialectal) To avoid; baffle, outwit, shirk.
- remove from the shell
- remove the shucks from
noun
- A misuse of a word; an application of a term to something which it does not properly denote.
- (rhetoric) A misapplication or overextension of a figurative or analogical description; a wrongly applied metaphor or trope.
- (often, especially) Such a misuse involving some similarity of sound between the misused word and the appropriate word.
- strained or paradoxical use of words either in error (as ‘blatant’ to mean ‘flagrant’) or deliberately (as in a mixed metaphor: ‘blind mouths’)
verb
noun
verb
- (transitive) To fraudulently portray another person; to impersonate.
- (transitive) To attribute personal characteristics to something; to personify.
- (transitive) To set forth in an unreal character; to disguise; to mask.
- (transitive) To portray a character (as in a play); to act.
- attribute human qualities to something
- pretend to be someone you are not; sometimes with fraudulent intentions
adj
noun
- An incorrect use of a term, especially one which is misleading; a misname.
- (law) A mistake in the naming of a person or place; a misidentification.
- A term which is misleading, even if firmly established, technically correct, or both.
- (nonstandard, proscribed) Something which is asserted not to be true; a mistaken belief, a falsehood, a myth.
- an incorrect or unsuitable name
verb
noun
- (slang) A phony.
- (slang, African-American Vernacular) A fraud; a scam.
- The shell or husk, especially of grains (e.g. corn/maize) or nuts (e.g. walnuts).
- (European folklore) A supernatural and generally malevolent black dog in English folklore.
- material consisting of seed coverings and small pieces of stem or leaves that have been separated from the seeds
verb
- (dialectal, of a horse) To walk at a slow trot.
- (transitive, intransitive, slang) To fool; to hoax.
- (dialectal) To shake; shiver.
- (transitive) To remove (any outer covering).
- (dialectal) To do hurriedly or in a restless way.
- (dialectal) To slither or slip, move about, wriggle.
- (computing, slang, transitive) To remove (an external hard drive or solid-state drive) from its casing so that it can be used inside another device.
- (transitive) To remove the shuck from (walnuts, oysters, etc.).
- (dialectal) To avoid; baffle, outwit, shirk.
- remove from the shell
- remove the shucks from
noun
- A misuse of a word; an application of a term to something which it does not properly denote.
- (rhetoric) A misapplication or overextension of a figurative or analogical description; a wrongly applied metaphor or trope.
- (often, especially) Such a misuse involving some similarity of sound between the misused word and the appropriate word.
- strained or paradoxical use of words either in error (as ‘blatant’ to mean ‘flagrant’) or deliberately (as in a mixed metaphor: ‘blind mouths’)
verb
- To misrepresent.
- To counterfeit; to forge.
- (sciences, otherwise archaic) To prove to be false.
- (accounting) To show (an item of charge inserted in an account) to be wrong.
- To alter so as to make false; especially when done with intent to deceive.
- make false by mutilation or addition; as of a message or story
- falsify knowingly
- prove false
- insert words into texts, often falsifying it thereby
- tamper, with the purpose of deception
verb
noun
verb
noun
verb
- (transitive) To fraudulently portray another person; to impersonate.
- (transitive) To attribute personal characteristics to something; to personify.
- (transitive) To set forth in an unreal character; to disguise; to mask.
- (transitive) To portray a character (as in a play); to act.
- attribute human qualities to something
- pretend to be someone you are not; sometimes with fraudulent intentions
adj
adj
noun
- (informal) A person who assumes an identity or quality other than their own.
- (informal) Anything fraudulent or fake.
- (informal) A person who professes beliefs or opinions that they do not hold.
- a person who professes beliefs and opinions that he or she does not hold in order to conceal his or her real feelings or motives