no. that's just a rumor
misquote
The opposite of the word "quote" is "misquote." "Quote" means to repeat something that someone else has said or written accurately, while "misquote" means to repeat something inaccurately or with errors.
Nipper
misquote
She accidentally misquoted the author during her presentation, which led to confusion among the audience.
Mosquitos do not have teeth.
Boat, float, moat, stoat, remote, coat, bloat, dote, float, gloat, goat, mote, note, oat, quote, wrote, vote, tote, misquote, afloat, rewrote, misquote, and underwrote.
It is generally not illegal to misquote a dead person, as defamation laws typically protect the reputation of living individuals. However, misquoting a deceased person could still be considered unethical or misleading, depending on the context in which it occurs.
It's either a misquote of Shakespeare's play "Much Ado about Nothing", or it's clever pun on the same.
Alice Adams and its actually a misquote what she actually said was, "They make up things. Yes, they do, really."
That has been attributed to Yogi Berra but is a misquote; what he actually said was:"Ninety percent of this game is half-mental."
I'm going out on a limb and assuming you mean the speech he gave after the death of ML King Jr, which was a misquote of Aeschylus.