View example sentences and word forms for Misinterpretations.
Misinterpretations meaning
plural of misinterpretation
Example sentences (15)
In an effort to “correct the associated misinterpretations and misinformation” about COVID-19 vaccines, the FDA and CDC wrote a joint response to Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, MD, after he made bogus claims that immunization poses severe risks.
There are misinterpretations of intent and then it keeps escalating.
By 1996–1999, Burkett and I were no longer simply trying to correct gross misinterpretations of Marx on ecology, but rather were engaged in a much more affirmative way in unearthing Marx’s long neglected ecological critique of capital.
The strategic frame inspired misinterpretations of evidence—real bleed-through falsely seen as affecting ballot counting—that were shared and amplified, strengthening the frame.
Vicky was quoted saying, “I hope you respect this… I really want to guard my personal life to some extent because if you open up, it leads to discussions and interpretations and misinterpretations.
VATICAN CITY — Citing the negative misinterpretations that the word “secret” implies, Pope Francis has changed the name of the Vatican Secret Archives to the Vatican Apostolic Archives.
The chamber said such misinterpretations bred roadside appeal to entities which always saw bills passed by the National Assembly as either self-serving or infractions on extant laws of the land.
However, misinterpretations of maps by subsequent Spanish explorers led Saint Kitts to be named San Cristobal ( Saint Christopher ), a name originally applied to Saba twenty miles north.
It argues that because history and culture condition the study of underlying structures, both are subject to biases and misinterpretations.
It does so, they argue, "by requiring excessive deference to past decisions that themselves may have been misinterpretations of the law of the land.
Most often, ancient "spelling errors" are simply misinterpretations of context.
The role of wildcard records was refined in RFC 4592, because the original definition in RFC 1034 was incomplete and resulted in misinterpretations by implementers.
These and many other details are likely embellishments that were added to his legend, or misinterpretations of literature describing him.
The vagueness of the intuitionistic notion of truth often leads to misinterpretations about its meaning.
This has led to misinterpretations of the tribal name, also partly traced to a translation error in Frederick W. Hodge 's 1917 Handbook of the American Indians North of Mexico (1917).