to lead wrongly
The past participle of "mislead" is "misled."
The answer is misled.
The past tense for "mislead" is "misled."
You are misled if you do not know scripture
Verb. A verb is an action, so what did you do? You misled someone.
Misled by Certainty was created on 2010-08-31.
A scam-artist misled John into buying a defective product.
Two examples from the Bible where men were misled by women are Adam being misled by Eve to eat the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden, and Samson being misled by Delilah who betrayed him to the Philistines by cutting his hair, the the source of his strength.
Misled - Celine Dion song - was created on 1994-03-28.
dog sled
The cast of Misled - 2007 includes: Mitchell Hamer as Daniel Bryce Kennedy as Rowan
Yes, "mislead" and "misled" are considered homophones in many dialects, as they are both pronounced the same way but have different spellings and meanings. "Mislead" is the present tense form, while "misled" is the past tense form of the same verb.