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"misremember" Definitions
  1. to remember something in a way that is not accurate or true

54 Sentences With "misremember"

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

But most people who were there might misremember it anyway.
But as our favorite economists (to misremember) said: time over money!
But the longer and more often you misremember something, the truer it becomes.
No doubt many Boomers today misremember having opposed the war from the start.
It was also greatly entertaining, but I'm sure I'll misremember most of it.
Sometimes we misremember movie quotes because a sequel or the book version was different.
It is a ridiculously famous quote that we misremember from the Tarzan series of movies.
We often forget or misremember details about our experiences, even if we initially perceived them clearly.
Did he somehow misremember, or was he mistaken about what the FBI had, and why, all along?
"People have a tendency to 'misremember' what was agreed upon from meetings or passing conversations," she says.
As the shadowless become untethered from reality, they can "misremember" the world, and their wild fantasies can replace reality.
It's not unreasonable to think that people lie about or misremember how much they watch in self-reported studies.
Today there is a willful distortion of the empire in the British public mind, a strange determination to misremember it.
But one of the things that people misremember is that there wasn't ever a huge hockey stick in that graph.
People are notoriously unreliable reporters of their own behavior: people misremember, forget, or fudge their responses to make themselves look better.
People in romantic relationships that have gone sour tend to misremember the fact that they were ever happy with their partners.
Senior moments, when you can't remember a name or phrase, or misremember where it came from, happen to many of us.
So, and what we misremember is that the "follow me around" quote came out the same day as the Miami Herald article.
Also note that eyewitness accounts are often unreliable in chaotic situations like Monday's van attack, and people can easily misremember what they saw.
But they often misremember it — the usual derivation is a bit convoluted involving a technique called "completing the square" — and get the wrong answers.
After seeing a falsified story from a not-credible news outlet online, it's possible to later "misremember that you actually saw it on CNN," he says.
Studies suggested that women who believe in premenstrual syndrome, when asked about it in retrospect, tend to misremember the symptoms as more severe than they were.
Loftus said that while they typically remember the core information, it is common for these individuals to forget or misremember peripheral details around the traumatic event.
You might think that's because the older we get, the more we misremember a detail or two, such as the exact age we were when something happened.
Research into false memories has shown for decades that getting people to misremember real-life events is fairly simple, which is why eyewitness testimony is notoriously unreliable.
Cases of mistaken identity like this are becoming more common as more people around the globe acquire email addresses — and more of their correspondents misremember or mistype them.
Most customers have a selective memory when it comes to buying from exploitative companies: Research has shown that most either forget or misremember products that are unethically made.
HR might simply ask employees to fill out a survey on how they get work done — though there's always the risk that people will misrepresent or misremember their actual experience.
Buy Where Do We Go From Here: Amazon | Barnes & Noble Professor James W. Loewen has written several books about the ways Americans misremember, tone down, and outright lie about our history.
"Even a very confident and well-intentioned eyewitness can misremember and misreport the events of a crime scene and who was involved," Steblay wrote in a report filed with the court.
In previous years, I might have been inclined to discount or dismiss those findings, citing the behavioral research that shows that women tend to misremember the severity of their PMS symptoms.
But it's better by far than the accounts of officers who may misremember particularly heated moments or—there's no nice way to say this—occasionally lie to save their own skins after killing someone.
For the past 150 years, there has been a concerted effort to misremember what slavery was and who was responsible, not only to exonerate whites, but to also ensure that white power remains entrenched.
After the brief distractions, however, students were much less likely to mention if a desk was made of endangered rainforest wood; many even seemed to misremember, and wrongly described a desk as made from sustainable wood.
Those whispers have grown louder after Biden struggled in the first debate (and, to a lesser extent, the second) and as he has continued to misremember things and make other factual mistakes on the campaign trail.
"Even a very confident and well-intentioned eyewitness can misremember and misreport the events of a crime scene and who was involved," expert Nancy Steblay wrote in a 20-page report prepared for McCullough's lawyers and filed with the court.
Here I differ not only from liberals who misremember Obama as a punctilious norm-respecter, but also from those conservatives fretting that Trump is establishing a precedent for a future liberal president to impose a Green New Deal by fiat.
To say it is easy is to remember the individual rights that we personally value most; and to misremember the community of rights of which they are a part — a community of give-and-take which makes our society a civil and fair place to live for people of all faiths, beliefs, and values.
I mean-- people-- JOE KERNEN: That lizard-- WARREN BUFFETT: --people at Geico seemed-- people at Geico misremember that entire-- they think it was their idea, and I remember I sketched that little-- JOE KERNEN: Isn't that the way it is-- WARREN BUFFETT: --guy out and said, "Why don't we try the g--" I thought it was crazy-- JOE KERNEN: That happens on the show a lot, I know.
You might make mistakes when explaining where you were at the time of a crime that the police interpret as lies; the officer talking to you could misremember what you say much later; you may be tricked into saying the wrong things by cops under no obligation to tell you the truth; and your statements to police could, in combination with faulty eyewitness accounts, shoddy "expert" testimony, and sheer bad luck, lead to you being convicted of a serious crime.
One common interpretation is that the possibility exists that one might misremember the sensation, and therefore one does not have any firm criterion for using S in each case.This account is supported by §207 So, for example, I might one day focus on that sensation, and link it to the symbol S; but the next day, I have no criteria for knowing that the sensation I have now is the same as the one yesterday, except for my memory; and since my memory might fail me, I have no firm criteria for knowing that the sensation I have now is indeed S. However, memory scepticism has been criticized as applying to public language, also. If one person can misremember, it is entirely possible that several people can misremember. So memory scepticism could be applied with equal effect to ostensive definitions given in a public language.
Patients may exaggerate symptoms in order to make their situation seem worse, or they may under-report the severity or frequency of symptoms in order to minimize their problems. Patients might also simply be mistaken or misremember the material covered by the survey.
He described it as a work of fiction whose characters misremember and dissemble.William Abrahams, "Letters: Maybe Not", July 20, 1980; accessed December 17, 2011One journalist wrote that it is "an examination of memory that comes as close as Hellman is likely to get to novel writing." Bryer, Conversations, 290 (1981 interview).
While studying these inconsistencies, Scheerer and Goldstei found that Patient A's memory was sharpest for positive memories and weakest for negative memories. The study of Patient A gives evidence to the theory that patients with selective amnesia cling to specific memories, specifically positive memories. However, this fixation on positive memories causes patients to misremember negative or neutral life events, causing their memory to appear disjointed and defective.
By the 1960s and '70s, influenced by the rise of new social history, interviewing began to be employed more often when historians investigated history from below. Whatever the field or focus of a project, oral historians attempt to record the memories of many different people when researching a given event. Interviewing a single person provides a single perspective. Individuals may misremember events or distort their account for personal reasons.
A similar pattern of errors was found in J. B. Rhine's dice experiments, which were considered the strongest evidence for PK at that time. In 1995, Wiseman and Morris showed subjects an unedited videotape of a magician's performance in which a fork bent and eventually broke. Believers in the paranormal were significantly more likely to misinterpret the tape as a demonstration of PK, and were more likely to misremember crucial details of the presentation. This suggests that confirmation bias affects people's interpretation of PK demonstrations.
The findings of this experiment were replicated around the world, and researchers consistently demonstrated that when people were provided with misleading information they tended to misremember, a phenomenon known as the misinformation effect. Research has revealed that asking individuals to repeatedly imagine actions that they have never performed or events that they have never experienced could result in false memories. For instance, Goff and Roediger (1998) asked participants to imagine that they performed an act (e.g., break a toothpick) and then later asked them whether they had done such a thing.
A zombie outbreak is caused by a sushi chef not washing his hands before preparing a meal, gloveless, for homeless dumpster-divers. 29 days later in a hospital, a zombie named Romeo thinks to himself how zombies are slowly regaining humanity. He evades survivors Chicago (who is looking for porn) and Green Bay, who meet idiotic Sheriff Lincoln (Dave Sheridan), who has woken from a coma; his son Chris accidentally hit him with a baseball, making him misremember Chris' name. After learning LinkedIn is what's left of the internet, Lincoln decides to search for his family; Green Bay and Chicago wish him luck, revealing their group resides in the mall.
Jim and Jenny might one day decide to call some particular tree T; but the next day misremember which tree it was they named. In this ordinary language case, it makes sense to ask questions such as "is this the tree we named T yesterday?" and make statements such as "This is not the tree we named T yesterday". So one can appeal to other parts of the form of life, perhaps arguing: "this is the only Oak in the forest; T was an oak; therefore this is T". An everyday ostensive definition is embedded in a public language, and so in the form of life in which that language occurs. Participation in a public form of life enables correction to occur.
For example, Jim and Jenny might one day decide to call some particular tree T; but the next day both misremember which tree it was they named. If they were depending entirely on their memory, and had not written down the location of the tree, or told anyone else, then they would appear to be with the same difficulties as the individual who defined S ostensively. And so, if this is the case, the argument presented against private language would apply equally to public language. This interpretation (and the criticism of Wittgenstein that arises from it) is based on a complete misreading, however, because Wittgenstein's argument has nothing to do with the fallibility of human memory, but rather concerns the intelligibility of remembering something for which there is no external criterion of correctness.
They were presented with a picture of a Black or White suspect and were asked to complete a memory task where they had to identify the suspect in a lineup with other suspects of the same race. Some lineups had suspects with highly stereotypical features of each respective race, whereas others had less stereotypical facial features. Crime-primed officers who viewed a Black suspect misremembered the suspect with someone who had more stereotypical Black features; but crime primed officers who saw a White suspect were less likely to identify a less stereotypical White suspect and more likely to associate it with a more stereotypical Black face. Eberhardt’s research shows how racial associations can impact the public's perception of Black people and crime and how this can influence how White people would misremember or neglect evidence that isn’t accurate for a Black defendant.
Nick (Nelson Franklin) was the IT administrator brought in by Sabre corporate (however, Franklin made a previous cameo in "Job Fair" as "Graphic Design Guy.").pp Reserved but amiable, he is regarded as a "nerd" by Michael, and the rest of the staff often treated him badly, often forgetting his name, and even his occupation within the office. He ultimately quits his job in the sixth-season finale, in order to join Teach for America in Detroit, but, after the employees once again misremember who he is, and Dwight insults him, he tells off the entire staff for their poor treatment of him and for not even having the common courtesy to just take the time to remember his name. He vengefully reveals a number of personal secrets that various office members have kept hidden on their computers, and gives everyone "the finger" as he leaves.
The theory has been used to explain the content of some quartos, and also to suggest identities of the actors responsible, on the assumption that they would get their own parts right, along with cue-lines and possibly other lines performed when they were onstage, but would most likely make more errors when reconstructing scenes in which their character was not present. The cast members of an Elizabethan dramatic production had their own parts written out for them, with relevant entrances and cues, but they did not have their own individual copies of the play text as a whole. The theory has, however, been criticised on various grounds; that it is not based on serious research into the way actors actually remember or misremember lines; that texts may have been "stolen" by other means; and that the so-called "bad" quartos are early or alternative versions of plays that were later revised.
As an example, Zukofsky cites the following short section from A Group of Verse, a long poem sequence that was Reznikoff's contribution to the issue: :Among the heaps of brick and plaster lies :a girder, still itself among the rubbish. In which the girder among the rubbish represents –for Zukofsky– the poem as object, sincere in itself. Oppen continued to refer to these lines as a poetic touchstone as late as 1976, though he would often misremember them as "a girder, still itself among the rubble." Oppen's own contribution was a poem titled "1930s", later collected (without the title) as the opening section of Oppen's first collection called Discrete Series, a book-length poem sequence. > :The knowledge not of sorrow, you were ::saying, but of boredom :Is -- aside > from reading speaking ::smoking -- :Of what, Maude Blessingbourne it was, > ::wished to know when, having risen, :“approached the window as if to see > ::what really was going on”; :And saw rain falling, in the distance ::more > slowly, :The road clear from her past the window- ::glass -- :Of the world, > weather-swept, with which ::one shares the century.

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