She was misleaded, as she found out, to her dismay.
A "Judas goat" is utilized to mislead the sheep.
When the man wrote the wrong answer, he was trying to mislead the asker.
She tried to show me how to play the game, but he was misleading me and confusing me.
The past participle of "mislead" is "misled."
of Misle, of Mislead, imp. & p. p. of Mislead.
The past tense for "mislead" is "misled."
Mislead Youth was created on 2005-07-19.
Yes it's illegal to mislead a tenant. There are certain ways you could get out of it, if you did mislead him, but didn't out rightly lie to him. If it can be proven that you purposely did mislead him than it's illegal just like misleading anyone else.
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.
The safe was guaranteed to be fire proof. The only items left in the burned out store was the fire proof safe and walk in freezer.
It's misled. A previous answer incorrectly stated that the past tense of mislead was also mislead, but just pronounced differently so it would rhyme with bed, red, said, wed, etc. That is not right! The past tense of lead is led. The past tense of mislead is misled. When lead is pronounced to rhyme with bed, red, said and wed, then it is a noun == and only a noun -- as in "get the lead out."
Yes