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"misjudge" Definitions
  1. misjudge somebody/something | misjudge how, what, etc… to form a wrong opinion about a person or situation, especially in a way that makes you deal with them or it unfairly
  2. misjudge something | misjudge how long, how far, etc… to estimate something such as time or distance wrongly

144 Sentences With "misjudge"

How to use misjudge in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "misjudge" and check conjugation/comparative form for "misjudge". Mastering all the usages of "misjudge" from sentence examples published by news publications.

" Read the cover story "Did America Misjudge Bernie Sanders?
"People maybe misjudge what they're supposed to do," MacCallum said.
Too often, we misjudge the nature and standard of success.
"If you use subjective judgment, you could misjudge or overlook something."
But Hall said the candidates onstage at the debates misjudge them.
Instead, the buyers think public markets misjudge Merlin's long-term prospects.
It can only be hoped that they do not misjudge their strength.
I don't think it's much but, you know, I could misjudge that.
Whatever else they misjudge about Ireland, Brexiteers, of all people, should understand that.
It's easy to misjudge the depth of water, they say, especially at night.
Warning: Traffic-Aware Cruise Control may misjudge the distance from a vehicle ahead.
Most people misjudge how likely they are to develop a melanoma, he added.
Right fielder Abraham Almonte went back on the ball and appeared to misjudge it.
How did the Renaissance papacy so badly misjudge the moment, accelerating the Protestant Reformation?
Some entrepreneurs misjudge costs, and end up spending more than they budgeted — or expected.
"I hope some people in the U.S do not misjudge the situation," he said.
It's notoriously easy to misjudge how the Supreme Court will rule based on oral arguments.
"Most people misjudge how long they will be unhappy after a breakup," Dr. Jay says.
I hope President-elect Trump won't become the 3rd American president to misjudge Vladmir Putin.
A mist had settled over the Barnes Airport, causing the pilot to misjudge the runway.
But this hasn't stopped anyone from taking it too seriously, and misjudge the competition's significance.
It is no good brilliantly predicting consumer behaviour in 2027 if you misjudge counterparty risk today.
And if he misjudge or miscalculates, it will be the biggest mistake North Korea ever makes.
Outgoing economy minister Pier Carlo Padoan warned Conte not to misjudge the power of the markets.
Money-losing coal plants may incur further losses if their owners misjudge the rising tide of renewables.
Sometimes I misjudge people based on their rating, but more often than not my intuition is right.
But what worries many is that Tehran might misjudge Mr. Trump's stated unwillingness to go to war.
Misjudge how much to charge each group of customers, and the flywheel can come to a juddering halt.
Don't trust that rock with your weight, misjudge the depth of the juniper thicket, or turn in circles.
There are many ways in which we can misjudge dogs by assuming that they are little furry humans.
Survivorship bias is an error that comes from focusing only on surviving examples, causing us to misjudge a situation.
A vast body of research in this field documents our cognitive biases and tendency to misjudge and misinterpret information.
"China strongly urges the United States not to misjudge the situation or underestimate determination of the Chinese people," it added.
"I hope some people in the U.S do not misjudge the situation," Gao said at a briefing, according to Reuters.
Vitally, this defence can be invoked even if householders misjudge the perils that they face, in the heat of the moment.
"China strongly urges the United States not to misjudge the situation or underestimate determination of the Chinese people," the ministry added.
"Never did a band of violent men so misjudge the temper of the objects of their act of intimidation," Rothschild said.
The basic problem is this: The human brain evolved so that we systematically misjudge risks and how to respond to them.
The idea that certain groups misjudge the amount of discrimination that other groups struggle with is probably not such a shock.
It's possible for the mentor to simply misjudge a child, whose personality isn't close to completion at the age of recruitment.
Yet just how much distortion is occurring is unclear, and the Fed could easily misjudge the friendliness of the global financial environment.
And so they continue to misjudge the intensity of the Sanders people, and the Trump people, and the Black Lives Matter people.
This is setting off rounds of hand-wringing as establishment types in the state and nationally (again) misjudge the mood of an angry electorate.
Said differently, there is a very high probability that we will misjudge where that crossover point is and will thus go beyond the key threshold.
But in the end, Trump seemed to come across as the more unacceptable -- and appeared to misjudge the tone of the evening worse than Clinton.
We often misjudge how much internet culture is the broader culture, and that's why things like this embarrassing "damn Daniel" moment on The Bachelorette happen.
Dallacker and her colleagues suspect that a "health halo" hovers over things like fruit juice and yogurt, leading parents to misjudge the sugar in them.
David FrielShanghai To the Editor: People certainly misjudge risk, and immediate threats such as influenza should not be ignored despite alarming reports of COVID-19.
Pyne helped fill me in on just how wrong we've been about Neanderthals — and why anthropologists are so keen to misjudge the fossils they discover.
Should executives misjudge the market and face a significant drop after trading begins (and no subsequent recovery), it becomes very challenging to bring on quality talent.
But even after twenty-something years of existence, I still misjudge and end up sunburnt, aging my skin and leaving it more vulnerable to skin cancers.
While this might seem simple enough to follow, it's easy to misjudge the conditions and then realize that it's too hot in the middle of a workout.
Nunez was credited with an RBI triple in the fifth, but the extra bases occurred because center fielder Herrera appeared to misjudge the ball in the air.
" Bloomberg said the State Department's job is "building relationships and having backdoor conversations so that we don't make a mistake and misjudge what the other side is doing.
Misjudge a moment or say the wrong thing and a US candidate can quickly find him or herself out of the race -- or at least on the wrong track.
Frontier-market specialists sense a greater interest in their bailiwick from crossover (non-specialist) investors, also known as "tourists", who are likelier to misjudge the odds of a default.
A spokesman also warned North Korea not to "misjudge the solidity of our alliance with the United States," in a recognition that ties may appear to have become strained.
In a televised interview after the news of his retirement, he said that his greatest error had been to misjudge the relative trajectories of German and American interest rates.
"North Korea should not misjudge the solidity of our alliance with the United States and our joint ability to respond" to provocations, said Jeong Joon-hee, a government spokesman.
That silence could lead to flawed judgements, because ignoring the speed of blockchain development — and its increasingly varied use — leads to misjudge the real nature of the competitive field.
In "cold" states, by contrast, we misjudge how much our preferences can change over time and, subject to the pull of inertia, forgo treatments we later wish we'd had.
"Do not misjudge the situation and mistake our restraint for weakness," said Yang Guang, spokesperson for the central government in Hong Kong – in Mandarin, of course – during an August press conference.
"Many clinicians are bad at doing universal screenings — or they have a misconception about who should be tested and how often, so they misjudge which patients need routine screenings," Rizza says.
Gajkowski of Money Managers Financial Group said if people misjudge their own risk tolerance and get burned a couple times in the market, they might get out and never get back in.
KCNA said Kim accused the United States of "browbeating" countries that "have no nukes", warning Washington not to misjudge the reality that its mainland was in the North's "sighting range for strike".
They think that gun-owners misjudge the risks and benefits of keeping weapons at home, after years of being lied to by politicians and gun lobbyists for reasons of electoral and commercial advantage.
While we can easily misjudge, misunderstand, or even avoid a pregnant individual's experience of miscarriage, we can also forget that the loss of a pregnancy may impact a wide range of other people too.
Archival pages from The New York Times can attest that not so long ago, pilots were more likely to misjudge terrain and crash into mountains, or even to crash into other planes in midair.
Even doctors might misjudge gun death frequency Another study published in Annals of Internal Medicine on Monday finds that many adults in the US -- including health care professionals -- misperceive the frequency of gun-related deaths.
Zeus Living's co-founders Zeus Living's co-founders Zeus' biggest threat is that it could get overextended, misjudge demand and end up on the hook to pay rent for two-year leases it can't fill.
Ministers from the caretaker center-left government cleared out their offices on Friday in preparation for the new incumbents and outgoing economy minister Pier Carlo Padoan warned Conte not to misjudge the power of the markets.
To the extent we misjudge the market for the merchandise we offer or fail to execute on trends and deliver attractive merchandise to clients, our sales will decline and our operating results will be adversely affected.
The country is half a million housing units short of demand, he said, and because successive New Zealand governments had not been involved in homebuilding for decades, inexperience had led Ms. Ardern's party to misjudge their targets.
Even with an exception in place to extend prison sentences beyond the 20-year cap, there is a chance, however small, that sometimes courts will misjudge, and a person will be released when he shouldn't have been.
Team Xi did misjudge Mr Trump, wrongly assuming that this businessman-president, so charming in private with Mr Xi, could be bought off with the sort of tactical concessions that China has long used to placate angry foreigners.
The second, off-tree problems, means that Libratus no longer approximates the size of its opponents bets, a technique that made the game simpler to play, but sometimes caused Claudico to badly misjudge the size of the pot.
"I would like to warn all of the criminals: don't ever misjudge the situation and mistake our restraint for weakness," the Chinese government's Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office said in a document issued during a briefing in Beijing.
"There is also a chance Saddam will once again miscalculate, that he will misjudge our resolve, and in that event we must be prepared to use force with others if we can, and alone if we must," Biden said.
"If you have a manager who is not as understanding when her current reports are going to be out, doing it in person makes it a lot harder to misread their body language, or misjudge their reaction," she says.
Gold is thinking of the stigma around mental illness when she speaks out "I think as a society, we might misjudge how many people go through things kind of like I did, on whatever scale that they do," she says.
Some entrepreneurs misjudge costs, and end up spending more than they budgeted, while others spend too little to give their business a realistic chance, in the mistaken belief that being careful and frugal is always the right way to proceed.
For The Wing, a lack of foresight and due diligence seems to have led it to misjudge the realities and regulations of running a childcare service, ultimately leaving the very people it sought to help — working moms — in the lurch.
A handful of unscrupulous prosecutors may conceal information that undermines their cases, she said, but many more well-meaning prosecutors may simply misjudge the importance of evidence to a defendant's case, or even be unaware that it is important at all.
Using Dan Deacon's unique brand of electronica, Peck now wants to surprise people who've possibly never heard anything like Deacon's music before, intrigue those who misjudge ballet, or just give others an outlet to express their fear, love, and angst in Trump's America.
"I would like to warn all of the criminals: don't ever misjudge the situation and mistake our restraint for weakness," the Chinese government's Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office said in a document issued during a Beijing briefing, according to the news service.
If you find yourself in a position where the image you built up in your mind doesn't match the day-to-day you're slogging through, take heart in this: You are not the first person in the world to misjudge a professional fit.
Generally, people often misjudge the trails they plan to take, which can lead to being out longer than you might expect and a subsequent domino effect of other problems, like running out of food, drinking water, or even becoming hypothermic if you don't have the correct gear, Lawhon said.
There's no better, or more succinct expression of Jeff Bezos' goals with Amazon than this description of the company's ambitions from The Nation: To think of Amazon as a retailer, though, is to profoundly misjudge the scope of what its founder and chief executive, Jeff Bezos, has set out to do.
"North Korea should not misjudge the solidity of our alliance with the United States and our joint ability to respond" to its provocations, a government spokesman, Jeong Joon-hee, warned, adding that the South remained unshakable in its belief that it should maintain a strong military alliance with the United States.
For two years, Hohoff helped Lee create "To Kill a Mockingbird": a coming-of-age story in which the protagonist and narrator, Scout—along with Jem and their summer sidekick, Dill—learns that she has misjudged the local outcast, Boo Radley, even as others in the town misjudge Tom Robinson.
" State media paraphrased North Korea's leader as saying that "the most perfect weapon systems in the world will never become the eternal exclusive property of the U.S., " warning that "the U.S. should not ... disregard or misjudge the reality that its mainland and Pacific operation region are in (North Korea's) sighting range for strike.
" State media paraphrased North Korea's leader as saying that "the most perfect weapon systems in the world will never become the eternal exclusive property of the U.S.," warning that "the U.S. should not ... disregard or misjudge the reality that its mainland and Pacific operation region are in (North Korea's) sighting range for strike.
Expecting to see the positive effects of more diversity in a town that has already spent a decade affirming and reaffirming their rejection of immigrants by legal means, even if it comes with stiff financial costs, is to completely misjudge how deeply ingrained this kind of racism is and, worse still, to misunderstand where it comes from.
In what may be the most brutal analysis ever written about the man, Sigmund Freud and William Bullitt, a former diplomat, depicted Wilson as a religious fanatic whose inability to resolve his simultaneous love and resentment toward his father, a learned Presbyterian clergyman, led him to misjudge both his wartime allies and his adversaries in Congress.
That's part of the reason why Robert Williams and Roman Yampolskiy, two researchers at the University of Louisville in Kentucky, want to develop machine learning systems that can create new optical illusions—they hope to learn more about the "very specific tricks that cause us to misjudge color, size, alignment and movement of what we are looking at," they wrote in a recent paper on their study.
And Candice realises that it's gotten a bit serious and it's not her place, definitely not her place, to get involved – it's neither her friend nor her argument – but she walks over and she's drunk and she doesn't watch what she's saying because why should she and true some people like Candy are too quick to run up their mouths when they're drunk and misjudge a situation, misjudge what the consequences could be, and she doesn't just walk over like wagwan, what's going on here – na, she's all up in the man's face like fuck you who the fuck do you think you are you pussyole you BANG He knocks Candice out with one punch, spits in Rochelle's face and walks off to his boys and the pavement holds Candice sprawled out unconscious on its dirty concrete shoulders, spotted with old chewing gum and the ghosts of feet.
Unless American and European democracies get their acts together, he warns darkly, the European Union and NATO might collapse, a "Greater Russian Empire" could rise as the heir to the Soviet Union and China would threaten the freedom of democracies across Asia — all resulting in "depths of oppression and aggression that we have not seen since the end of World War II." I like a worst-case scenario as much as the next fatalist, but this passage underplays what Diamond writes sensibly elsewhere about how dictatorships misjudge, overreach and provoke blowback.
When raising its body, the king cobra can still move forward to strike with a long distance, and people may misjudge the safe zone. It can deliver multiple bites in a single attack.
The fall began with intelligence failures by the French that led them to misjudge German plans such as their sweep through the Ardennes around the Maginot Line.Stafford, David. "Not Their Finest Hour", The New York Times, September 17, 2000. Accessed June 15, 2009.
A listener may misjudge the user of such a sentence to be unintellectual or uneducated. The speaker may be intellectually capable, educated, and proficient in standard English, but chose to say the sentence in AAVE for social and sociolinguistic reasons such as the intended audience of the sentence, a phenomenon known as code switching.
If the trick shot succeeds, then the player's energy gauge will increase dramatically. However, it is easy to misjudge the timing and therefore is a risky move to make. Another ability available to players at the cost of their energy gauge is the special shot. To activate it, the player must have a full energy gauge.
Moreover, Alexander's pretensions at friendship with Napoleon led the latter to seriously misjudge the true intentions of his Russian counterpart, who would violate numerous provisions of the treaty in the next few years. Despite these problems, the Treaties of Tilsit at last gave Napoleon a respite from war and allowed him to return to France, which he had not seen in over 300 days.
Molochai is slightly shorter, with roundish, babyish features. He favors sweets and cakes to the other's more adult tastes. There is no explanation of how the two found each other yet there is an account of their first encounter with Zillah whereupon they misjudge his true nature and attack him. They are easily overpowered by the older and more experienced vampire and thereafter act under his supervision.
He then stole second and advanced to third on a passed ball. Briggs singled to right, scoring Stephens. In the bottom of the seventh, Sweatt led off with a hit to right. After Duncan struck out, Drake hit a fly ball to center, which the wind caused George Johnson to misjudge; when it rolled away, Drake reached third with a triple, driving in Sweatt, and narrowing Hilldale's lead to 3–2.
Dip: Getting the ball to pitch (meet the ground) at a shorter distance than normal. Late dip causes the batsman to misjudge the length of the ball. Flight: throwing the ball up a bit more than normal, so that its time in the air before pitching is longer. A slow ball with extra flight may deceive the batsman into thinking it is slower than it is and therefore mistiming his shot.
At 16:45, as Flight 3303 was on approach to the airport in heavy rain, the crew wanted a north-to-south approach. The airport had no radar; the air traffic controller proceeded to misjudge the distance of the aircraft from the airport, and directed the flight to descend prematurely. The plane flew into a mountain near the town of Yangshuo, exploding and breaking up on impact. The accident killed all 112 people on board.
After completing his studies, he travelled to the south, as far as the Yangtze River. Traces of his presence in that part of the country are still pointed out in the department of Suzhou. He attracted three hundred students, to whom he laid down rules for their guidance in their intercourse with princes. When Confucius heard of his success, he confessed how he had been led by his bad looks to misjudge him.
To get to Jutland they must cross the then newly built Little Belt Bridge. But two other criminals (Helle Virkner and Willy Rathnov) have also got wind of the story. And the Olsen Gang do not make it easier for themselves by taking Yvonne along. And they mistakenly believe that it will be easy to fool the locals - especially they misjudge the wily scrap dealer (Karl Stegger) and his mute assistant (Preben Kaas).
Unfortunately, Sundari arrives at the place, so to cover up, Gopi introduces Raksha as Bosu's wife. After some comic incidents, Bosu marries his love interest Latha (Latha Sri) and the situations make Latha misjudge Raksha as Gopi's wife. Here, Sundari misunderstands, spotting Bosu with Latha, contrariwise Latha fells the same viewing Gopi with Sundari. The rest of the story is a funny confusing drama that how Gopi gets rid of these problems.
The fierce resistance of Sharma's company had caused 200 casualties to the raiders. Also, the tribal leader of the lashkar had a bullet through his leg. The Pakistani raiders made no attempt to exploit the vulnerabilities that night and move to the airfield or to Srinagar city. It is surmised that incapacitation of the leader, the heavy losses and reports of movement of 1 PUNJAB into the area had caused the raiders to misjudge the tactical situation.
Despite the resounding success of some of these films, Hollywood also produced a large number of musical flops in the late 1960s and early 1970s which appeared to seriously misjudge public taste. The commercially and/or critically unsuccessful films included Camelot, Finian's Rainbow, Hello Dolly!, Sweet Charity, Doctor Dolittle, Half a Sixpence, The Happiest Millionaire, Star!, Darling Lili, Goodbye, Mr. Chips, Paint Your Wagon, Song of Norway, On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, Man of La Mancha, Lost Horizon, and Mame.
One out later, Curt Flood followed with another single, and was also picked off by Lolich. In the top of the seventh, an exhausted Gibson finally cracked, giving up two-out singles to Norm Cash and Willie Horton. Jim Northrup then struck the decisive blow, lashing a triple to center field over the head of Flood, who appeared to misjudge how hard the ball was hit. That scored both Cash and Horton; Northrup himself was then brought home by a Bill Freehan double.
One out later, Curt Flood followed with another single, and was also picked off by Lolich. In the top of the seventh, an exhausted Gibson finally cracked, giving up two-out singles to Norm Cash and Willie Horton. Jim Northrup then struck the decisive blow, lashing a triple to center field over the head of Flood, who appeared to misjudge how hard the ball was hit. That scored both Cash and Horton; Northrup himself was then brought home by a Bill Freehan double.
Claus Reschke says that the male protagonists in Frisch's work are all similar modern Intellectual types: egocentric, indecisive, uncertain in respect of their own self-image, they often misjudge their actual situation. Their interpersonal relationships are superficial to the point of agnosticism, which condemns them to live as isolated loners. If they do develop some deeper relationship involving women, they lose emotional balance, becoming unreliable partners, possessive and jealous. They repeatedly assume outdated gender roles, masking sexual insecurity behind chauvinism.
In 1938 he rode the Bell- trained filly Rockfel, whom he described as the best horse he had ever ridden, to win the Oaks and Champion Stakes. Wragg had won his second Derby in 1930 riding Blenheim to victory after the horse had been rejected by the Aga Khan III's retained jockey Michael Beary. Low points of the decade included an indifferent ride on Sandwich in the 1931 Derby, when he appeared to misjudge the waiting tactics, and a broken leg sustained in a fall at Newcastle Racecourse in 1932.
The work begins with a poem in which Chaucer speculates on the nature and causes of dreams. He claims that he will tell his audience about his "wonderful" dream "in full." Chaucer then writes an invocation to the god of sleep asking that none, whether out of ignorance or spite, misjudge the meaning of his dream. The first book begins when, on the night of the tenth of December, Chaucer has a dream in which he is inside a temple made of glass, filled with beautiful art and shows of wealth.
The stepping feet illusion was initially demonstrated by Stuart Anstis in 2003. He proposed that the contrast effect was experienced by drivers in foggy conditions in which the difference in brightness between the car and its surroundings is generally less than a sunny day. As a result, people tended to misjudge that the speed of their cars was moving slower than the actual speed and felt that other cars were becoming less visible. While in foggy conditions, other cars were reduced in contrast, thus appearing slower than they really were.
Gilovich was an early author in the clustering illusion, which is closely related to the "hot hand" fallacy, and is the tendency to see "clusters" of data in a random sequence of data as nonrandom. In How We Know What Isn't So, Gilovich explains how people want to see a sequences such as as planned, even though it was arbitrary. In addition, he stated that people tend to misjudge randomness, thinking that rolling the same number on dice 4 times in a row is not truly random, when in fact it is.
By observing the tendencies and patterns of one's opponents, one can make more educated guesses about others' potential holdings. For example, if a player has been playing extremely tightly (playing very few hands), then when he/she finally enters a pot, one may surmise that he/she has stronger than average cards. One's table image is the perception by one's opponents of one's own pattern of play. A player can leverage their table image by playing out of character, and thereby inducing his/her opponents to misjudge his/her hand and make a mistake.
Prussia's humiliating treatment at Tilsit caused a deep and bitter antagonism which festered as the Napoleonic Era progressed. Moreover, Alexander's pretensions at friendship with Napoleon led the latter to seriously misjudge the true intentions of his Russian counterpart, who would violate numerous provisions of the treaty in the next few years. Despite these problems, Tilsit at last gave Napoleon a respite from war and allowed him to return to France, which he had not seen in over 300 days. His arrival was greeted with huge celebrations in Paris.
Button also finished in the top ten in all three practice sessions. The first qualifying session was wet and the team relied on the weather radar rather than using common sense to misjudge the weather conditions, failing to send their cars out at the optimum track conditions. Hamilton failed to make it out of the first part of qualifying, setting the 20th best time. Button just made it out of that session, but due to him aquaplaning into the gravel trap, he started seventeenth on the grid taking no further part in the qualifying session.
Although reformers lost another election, it was a different story two years later. Sonnichsen wrote that the incumbent Charles Kelly, so sure of victory, boasted he could be mayor of El Paso for the rest of his natural life if he wanted to. Kelly’s arrogance caused him to misjudge his campaign efforts until the last month before elections when he realized that his opponent, the young lawyer Tom Lea, had gained significant ground with the people. The “Ring” rented every meeting hall in the city the night before the election to make it impossible for Lea to hold a rally.
The only reason the father did not openly praise Kadhir is because he feared his son might misjudge him for giving him respect, only now that he is earning money for their household. Only then does Kadhir realize his father's love for him and weeps in joy. The intimacy between Kadhir and Anita is discovered by her mother and she refuses to allow them to continue dating even as Kadhir's father tries to persuade her otherwise. Anita's family is heavily indebted to another Northern Indian family that has been supporting them since Anita's father suffered losses in his business.
Andy had a keen eye for booby traps, and often shielded Barney from both career and social landmines. Andy's pride in and love for his hometown is very evident in his work and his homelife. Early shows depict Andy as having a naive demeanor and "aw-shucks" personality with home-spun humor which, actually, cover a wise and insightful outlook into people and situations, sometimes catching those who misjudge his intelligence off guard. Barney is often depicted as having grandiose opinions of his ability as a law enforcement officer, resulting in embarrassing situations which Andy wisely covers without hurting Barney's already sensitive nature.
The Chicago area is paralyzed by a snowstorm affecting Lincoln International Airport. A Trans Global Airlines (TGA) Boeing 707 flight crew misjudge their turn from Runway 29 onto the taxiway, becoming stuck in the snow and closing that runway. Airport manager Mel Bakersfeld is forced to work overtime, causing tension with his wife, Cindy. A divorce seems imminent as he nurtures a closer relationship with a co-worker, TGA customer relations agent Tanya Livingston. Vernon Demerest is a TGA captain scheduled to be the checkride captain for the airline to evaluate Captain Anson Harris during TGA Flight 2 to Rome.
In association football, an own goal occurs when a player causes the ball to go into their own team's goal, resulting in a goal being scored for the opposition. Defenders often "turn behind" dangerous balls into the penalty area, particularly crosses, by kicking or heading the ball out of play behind their goal-line. In this way, the defender's aim is to concede a corner rather than giving attacking players scoring opportunities. Consequently, the defender may misjudge and inadvertently turn the ball into their own goal, particularly if they are under pressure from attacking players who might otherwise score.
Folk epidemiology of autism refers to the popular beliefs about the origin of autism. Without direct informed knowledge of autism, a complex disorder, members of the public are influenced by rumors and misinformation presented in the mass media and repeated on social media and the internet. These misinformed beliefs persist even when contradicted by scientific evidence. Folk epidemiology persists because people seek, receive, and preferentially believe information that is consistent with their existing views; misjudge the reliability of their sources of information, and are misled by anecdotal evidence; and tend not to revise their opinions even when their original sources of information are shown to be wrong.
The variations in different types of delivery, as well as variations caused by directing the ball with differing line and length, are key weapons in a bowler's arsenal. Throughout an over, the bowler will choose a sequence of deliveries designed to attack the batsman's concentration and technique, in an effort to get him out. The bowler also varies the amount of loop and pace imparted to various deliveries to try to cause the batsman to misjudge and make a mistake. As the crease has a width, the bowler can change the angle from which he delivers to the batsman in an attempt to induce a misjudgement.
The only reason the father did not openly praise Girish (Gilli) is because he feared his son might misjudge him for giving him respect, only now that he is earning money for their household. Only then does Girish (Gilli) realize his father's love for him and weeps in joy. The intimacy between Girish (Gilli) and Arati is discovered by her mother and she refuses to allow them to continue dating even as Girish (Gilli)'s father tries to persuade her otherwise. Arati's family is heavily indebted to another Northern Indian family that has been supporting them since Arati's father suffered losses in his business.
In Aintree, Moss and Porsche were able to make up for their bad luck in earlier races and finally gain a championship win, locking out the podium. Moss made a poor start from pole, with the lead going to Brabham for much of the race, followed initially by Roy Salvadori (in a private Cooper), who was soon overtaken by Innes Ireland in a Lotus. Ireland would however misjudge his braking point at Tatts corner, taking some time to get going again. So then for the next several laps Brabham lead Salvadori, followed quite some distance back by Graham Hill in one of the factory Porsches.
This can cause users to misjudge the intake of one or both of the drugs, sometimes fatally. Because the stimulant effects of cocaine wear off far more quickly than the depressant effects of heroin or morphine, fatal respiratory depression often occurs when the full effects of a heroin or morphine overdosage are felt in isolation. Due to the countering effect of the cocaine, a fatally high opioid dose can be unwittingly administered without immediate incapacitation, thus providing a false sense of tolerance until it is too late. This form of delayed opioid overdose is believed to be the most common mechanism of death in speedball overdoses.
Mudflat waders In Dutch waters, mudflat hiking is only allowed with an appropriate license or under the supervision of a licensed guide, and only on recognized routes. In the Netherlands, Dijkstra's Wadlooptochten Pieterburen, Wadloopcentrum Fryslân in Holwerd, Wadloopcentrum Pieterburen Pieterburen, Stichting Uithuizerwad Uithuizen, Wadloopvereniging Arenicola Groningen, Wadgidsengroep Noord Nederland, and the Fryske Waedrinners are organisations for the training of mudflat hiking guides and the preservation of the sport. Though the tides change in very regular cycles, anyone can easily misjudge the situation and find themselves quickly surrounded by the rising water on all sides, far away from the beaches. A guide should be hired to prevent any mishaps.
This finding has an important implication for the interpretation of BOLD fMRI data where this high baseline activity is generally ignored and response to the task is shown as independent of the baseline activity. 13C MRS studies indicate that this approach can misjudge and even completely miss the brain activity induced by the task. 13C MRS findings together with other results from PET and fMRI studies have been combined in a model to explain the function of resting state activity called default mode network. Another important benefit of 13C MRS is that it provides unique means for determining the time course of metabolite pools and measuring turnover rates of TCA and glutamate–glutamine cycles.
The intention is that in creating movement in the delivery, the batsman will misjudge the line of the ball as it arrives, causing him to miss it entirely, in which case he may be dismissed bowled or lbw, or miss-hit it, in which case he may be out caught. To avoid becoming predictable, a bowler will typically bowl a variety of different deliveries with different combinations of pace and movement. A tactically astute bowler may be able to spot a potential weakness in a batsman that a particular delivery may be able to exploit. Bowlers will often also bowl deliveries in preplanned sets, with the intention of dismissing the batsman with the final delivery in the set.
Ideally, this means that the dataset alone could not be used to identify a participant. In some cases, the researchers simply misjudge the information in a de-identified dataset and actually it is identifying, or perhaps the advent of new technology makes the data identifying. In other cases, the published de-identified data can be cross-referenced with other data sets, and by finding matches between an identified dataset and the de- identified data set, participants in the de-identified set may be revealed. This is particularly the case with medical research data because traditional data anonymization techniques designed for numerical data are not as effective for the nonnumerical data contained in medical data, such as rare diagnoses and personalized treatments.
Aware of the problems that the Germans were experiencing in navigation, this raid caused the government to issue a D notice prohibiting the press from reporting anything about raids that was not mentioned in official statements. Only one of the 15 defensive sorties managed to make visual contact with the enemy, and one of the pilots, Flt Lieut D. M. Barnes, was killed on attempting to land.Cole and Cheesman, 1984, pp. 56-8 The first naval attempt on London took place on 4 June: strong winds caused the commander of L 9 to misjudge his position, and the bombs were dropped on Gravesend. L 9 was also diverted by the weather on 6–7 June, attacking Hull instead of London and causing considerable damage.
Das Geschlecht der Hellenen ist > in Europa ausgerottet. Schönheit der Körper, Sonnenflug des Geistes, Ebenmaß > und Einfalt der Sitte, Kunst, Rennbahn, Stadt, Dorf, Säulenpracht und > Tempel, ja sogar der Name ist von der Oberfläche des griechischen Kontinents > verschwunden.... auch nicht ein Tropfen echten und ungemischten > Hellenenblutes in den Adern der christlichen Bevölkerung des heutigen > Griechenlands fließet: Leeb, Fallmerayer, 55. This phenomenon was further interpreted by Fallmerayer as an indication of the potential of the "Slavic" nations to overwhelm the "Latin" and the "German", a line of thought which he would later develop in his political writings. He further argued that the Great Powers who had supported the Greek War of Independence which was led by Arvanites and Aromanians had been led by a "classical intoxication" to misjudge the character of the modern Greek state.
However, Foss did misjudge at least one leading British composer: Benjamin Britten. After handling some of Britten's early music, Foss, "in a decision later much regretted by OUP, decided not to continue as his publisher."Hinnells, "Foss", 489 Foss brought his whole suite of talents to the selection and production of music. Wright quotes Foss as saying that "the literary side of a song is of equal importance with the musical, and that no one should be expected to sing words of an inferior character."Wright, 92 His skills in art and typography manifested themselves in originating distinctive and unique covers, artwork, and layout for each of his "stable" of composers by which copies of their music could be visually identified.Hinnells, AEP, 25 This pleased his composers as well as acting as a marketing tool for the sale or rental of their music.
Sun-branded newsagent shop When Rebekah Wade (now Brooks) became editor in 2003, it was thought Page 3 might be dropped. Wade had tried to persuade David Yelland, her immediate predecessors in the job, to scrap the feature, but a model who shared her first name was used on her first day in the post.Ciar Byrne "Wade: I'm no Blair poodle", The Guardian, 15 January 2003 On 22 September 2003, the newspaper appeared to misjudge the public mood surrounding mental health, as well as its affection for former world heavyweight champion boxer Frank Bruno, who had been admitted to hospital, when the headline "Bonkers Bruno Locked Up" appeared on the front page of early editions. The adverse reaction, once the paper had hit the streets on the evening of 21 September, led to the headline being changed for the paper's second edition to the more sympathetic "Sad Bruno in Mental Home".
Krieg has argued that Adam's pursuit of accommodation between the church and the Nazi government was due to his belief that the church should play a central and fundamental role in society and the state. Krieg also argues that Adam's political naivety was in large part the result of his dependence on the ideas and categories of German Romanticism, which led him to envision a national community in harmonious relation to the church, and thus to misjudge political realities and fail to realise the incompatibility of Nazi ideology with Christian faith. In addition to his Romanticism, Krieg argues that Adam's political stance was also informed by the view that Germany was threatened by modernity and the tendencies toward democracy, individualism, secularisation and a modern notion of freedom that promoted diversity. These tendencies, Adam thought, required new social and political formations that would restore order and encourage community, tradition and Christian faith.
Shakespeare wrote the role of Hamlet for Richard Burbage, tragedian of The Lord Chamberlain's Men: an actor with a capacious memory for lines, and a wide emotional range.Taylor (2002, 4); Banham (1998, 141); Hattaway asserts that "Richard Burbage [...] played Hieronimo and also Richard III but then was the first Hamlet, Lear, and Othello" (1982, 91); Peter Thomson argues that the identity of Hamlet as Burbage is built into the dramaturgy of several moments of the play: "we will profoundly misjudge the position if we do not recognise that, whilst this is Hamlet talking about the groundlings, it is also Burbage talking to the groundlings" (1983, 24); see also Thomson on the first player's beard (1983, 110). A researcher at the British Library feels able to assert only that Burbage "probably" played Hamlet; see its page on Hamlet. Hamlet appears to have been Shakespeare's fourth most popular play during his lifetime, eclipsed only by Henry VI Part 1, Richard III and Pericles.Taylor (2002, 18).
Law, a neon sculptor and artist, originated the concept and design of installing neon on the Man at Burning Man , an act which at once created an invaluable navigation aid and an indelible, omnipresent symbol. At an event which at that time had no streets, street signs, fences, or any other artificially imposed boundaries, and which took place in the virtually featureless deep playa (on which it was very easy to lose one's bearings or misjudge distances and wind up stranded alone in the desert), this navigation aid certainly saved a lot of people a lot of trouble, and may well have saved lives. The early years of the festival allowed driving throughout the city but eventually curbed the practice back to only art cars. The symbol of the Burning Man, which had been added to the desert event later and was not part of its initial inception, became more and more identified with the event, in part because with the addition of the neon it was always universally visible, becoming the single unchanging reference point psychologically as well as physically.
In the fourth reading (, aliyah), God saw, was vexed, and hid God's countenance from them, to see how they would fare.. For they were a treacherous breed, children with no loyalty, who incensed God with no-gods, vexed God with their idols; thus God would incense them with a no-folk and vex them with a nation of fools.. A fire flared in God's wrath and burned down to the base of the hills.. God would sweep misfortunes on them, use God's arrows on them — famine, plague, pestilence, and fanged beasts — and with the sword would deal death and terror to young and old alike.. God might have reduced them to nothing, made their memory cease among men, except for fear of the taunts of their enemies, who might misjudge and conclude that their own hand had prevailed and not God's.. For Israel's enemies were a folk void of sense, lacking in discernment.. The fourth reading (, aliyah) ends here.See, e.g., The Schottenstein Edition Interlinear Chumash: Devarim / Deuteronomy. Edited by Menachem Davis, page 212.
While it is known that Richard Burbage played Hamlet in Shakespeare's time, there is no evidence of who played Ophelia; since there were no professional actresses on the public stage in Elizabethan England, we may assume that she was played by a boy.Taylor (2002, 4); Banham (1998, 141); Hattaway asserts that "Richard Burbage [...] played Hieronimo and also Richard III but then was the first Hamlet, Lear, and Othello" (1982, 91); Peter Thomson argues that the identity of Hamlet as Burbage is built into the dramaturgy of several moments of the play: "we will profoundly misjudge the position if we do not recognize that, whilst this is Weiner Hamlet talking about the groundlings, it is also Burbage talking to the groundlings" (1983, 24); see also Thomson (1983, 110) on the first player's beard. A researcher at the British Library feels able to assert only that Burbage "probably" played Hamlet; see its page on Hamlet. The actor appears to have had some musical training, as Ophelia is given lines from ballads such as "Walsingham" to sing, and, according to the first quarto edition, enters with a lute.

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