If in a paper or other material you attemt to quote someone, but in fact the words you wrote were not his. It often happens that an author or a jurnalsit simplyfies an answer that was given, but in that the answer gets a completely different meaning.
To misdirect = to point the wrong way Probably this questin is linked to "misquote" question. I think that you can misdirect a quote by attributing it to a person that has NT said that. In misquote you falsify the words themseves in misdirection the quote is correct, but attributed to the wrong person. Like the famous quote "Let them eat cake", which was never said by the wife of Louis XVI Marie Antoinette, but by Marie Therese of Spain, wife of Louis XIV. But please handle my answer with suspicion as I am not sure I am correct in this. Other answers appreciated.
first of all, mis- is not a suffix..it is a prefix Prefixes come before words and suffixes come after words. You can pretty much add this prefix to many words... EX: misunderstood, misinterpret, misleading, mistake, misspell, misbehave, mistreat, misquote, misfortune, misplace, misstep.
Mean
The haudensaunee mean irguios
MEAN ignoble - being mean signify - mean
The politician had a misquote from his opponent.
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
It's either a misquote of Shakespeare's play "Much Ado about Nothing", or it's clever pun on the same.
Mosquitos do not have teeth.
If we have a zombie apocalypse, yes.
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.
Boat, float, moat, stoat, remote, coat, bloat, dote, float, gloat, goat, mote, note, oat, quote, wrote, vote, tote, misquote, afloat, rewrote, misquote, and underwrote.
no. that's just a rumor
To misdirect = to point the wrong way Probably this questin is linked to "misquote" question. I think that you can misdirect a quote by attributing it to a person that has NT said that. In misquote you falsify the words themseves in misdirection the quote is correct, but attributed to the wrong person. Like the famous quote "Let them eat cake", which was never said by the wife of Louis XVI Marie Antoinette, but by Marie Therese of Spain, wife of Louis XIV. But please handle my answer with suspicion as I am not sure I am correct in this. Other answers appreciated.