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20 Sentences With "badly mistaken"

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

But anyone who thinks firing Mueller would make Trump's legal problems go away is badly mistaken.
If you imagine that such a trip would be easy to arrange, you'd be badly mistaken.
Failing to analyze the spillover means you'll be badly mistaken about the effects of the program.
Anyone who thought the Senate would be a safer place to keep Elizabeth Warren was badly mistaken.
If Lam thought the public would acquiesce in the wake of the grisly killing, she was badly mistaken.
But Trump was either badly mistaken or lied when he said China would pay for the bailout with money from the tariffs.
But if Democrats were hoping that the uproar surrounding the firing was going to push Mr. McConnell in their direction, they were badly mistaken.
Now, a pair of prominent British psychiatric researchers has broken ranks, calling the establishment's position badly mistaken and the standard advice on withdrawal woefully inadequate.
But Harrison says the exact opposite will happen -- and says if Juice is planning on making crazy money doing autograph signings at sports collectors shows ... he's BADLY mistaken.
"If they think this blast will create fear among the Sufi people, they are badly mistaken," said Nazar Husain Shah, who was visiting the shrine from a neighbouring district.
" He also reinforced what he tweeted after the announcement: "If Mr. Trump believes this is going to lead me to just go away and be quiet, he is very badly mistaken.
The idea that if we can only get rid of him we will be able to go back to our normal lives and everything will be fine is tempting but badly mistaken.
"If Mr. Trump believes this going to lead me to just go away and be quiet, he is very badly mistaken," said Brennan, who led the nation's top spy agency under former President Obama.
But if the goal is to eliminate the bogeyman whom the GOP uses to motivate its base, then some Democrats have a badly mistaken idea of what the modern Republican Party is all about and how contemporary politics works.
"He doesn't need to apologize to me, he needs to apologize to Florida voters, because if he thinks that those kind of shenanigans are going to be persuasive enough in this midterm election to turn their way, I think he's badly mistaken," Gillum said Thursday.
"(Trump) seems totally oblivious to the fact that the military commission system, which has already faced many delays, is just this week suffering another meltdown, so the idea that Guantanamo -- military commissions at Guantanamo -- a form of swift justice, is badly mistaken," Waxman said.
The story explores the limits of hospitality and sharing. Neil Reynolds had discussed it as a parable of immigration issues and the social welfare state. Aeon J. Skoble discusses Thidwick at length as an exemplification of the idea of property rights, and particularly of Locke's formulation of property rights. Skoble argues that Thidwick is badly mistaken in viewing the other animals as "guests", and that the story demonstrates this.
The literal contract disappeared late into the classical age, sustained by its use in the banking trade. In Justinian's law, it had been replaced by the written form of the stipulatio, and by a form of conclusive evidence for another sort of loan (mutuum or commodatum) where the holder lost his exceptio that the loan had not taken place after a period of time. Authors such as W. W. Buckland and Barry Nicholas believe Justinian's claim that this was a new form of literal contracts to be badly mistaken, the latter suggesting it was created mainly to bring the number of types up to four, the preferred number of divisions. Accordingly, no mention is made in the Digest to the original form.
Harrington came to the controversial conclusion that humans and the ground sloth had existed at the same time and dated them to 8500 BC. Later studies showed he was in the correct range for the animal bones, but badly mistaken about the human artifacts, which were dated to 900-400 BC. His dating for another site at Tule Springs, near Las Vegas, has equally been called into question. Harrington found a spear point in an apparent fire pit alongside the bones of several ancient animals, which led him to assert in a published article that they were contemporaries and that the site was between 10,000 and 25,000 years old. More recent scrutiny has put his dating in doubt, however. In 1933, on loan from the museum, Harrington went to work for the National Park Service under the Civilian Conservation Corps.
The story centers on Richard Dees, a deeply cynical reporter from a trashy supermarket tabloid called Inside View. Dees' current subject of investigation is the Night Flier, an apparent serial killer who travels between small airports in a Cessna Skymaster, gruesomely killing people in a way that leads Dees to think the man is a lunatic who believes himself to be a vampire. After only a few days of interviewing witnesses and following the killer's trail in his own Beechcraft Bonanza, Dees overtakes the Night Flier during a violent thunderstorm at Wilmington International Airport, and quickly learns that he is badly mistaken about his would-be quarry: it is, indeed, a vampire that is doing the killings. After Dees watches the Night Flier casually empty the bloody contents of his bladder into an airport urinal (or as much of this act as he can see reflected in a mirror), the creature warns off his "would-be biographer", destroys his photographic evidence, and leaves the mortally shaken reporter amidst a scene of carnage to explain himself to police, and watch as the Night Flier's plane takes off.

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