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60 Sentences With "misapprehensions"

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

H: What are the most common misapprehensions you've heard from people about this movie?
The mistakes and misapprehensions — what the authors thought they knew — mirror the broader thinking of their moment.
Many people have never worked with an attorney, and there are common misapprehensions about what seeking legal assistance means.
Mr. Trump's vernacular may be an unholy tangle of lies, misapprehensions, disinformation and personal insults, but it exposed Mrs.
That appears to reflect Trump's sincere misapprehensions about trade deficits, but also his preference for wheeling and dealing over systematic policymaking.
And rather than seeking to correct those misapprehensions, as they do on climate change, Greenpeace has long sought to inflame those fears.
As this debate starts to become more mainstream in America, there are lots of misunderstandings and misapprehensions being passed off as fact.
It's an easier question to answer historically, and I would say that there are basically three misapprehensions concerning the scale of the threat.
These misapprehensions illustrate the problem with the idea of caveat emptor, or buyer beware, when it comes to retail customers of financial services.
One of the key misapprehensions of this mindset is the idea that military force is decisive in a way that diplomacy is not.
Because I'm a nurse, I want to explore all the misapprehensions -- of biology, psychology, and ethics -- that this statement leans on and unfairly exploits.
Stone, an adviser to President Trump, told Reuters he believes the investigation of him is founded in "misapprehensions and misconceptions" spun by the media.
While the fears brought up by React World were justified by Fine Bros' prior protectionism, they were nonetheless inflated by a number of legal misapprehensions.
"The above facts may be publicised to address any queries or misapprehensions relating to the issue of security of tourists visiting India," the letter said.
This is why Obama spent much of his speech contrasting what he views as misapprehensions about American weakness and vulnerability with the reality of American strength and security.
" The granddaughter has similar misapprehensions, imagining that the older woman's past, about which she has said little, is filled only with "unalarming relics: a snood, antimacassars, finger bowls.
Using his work to confront stereotypes and misapprehensions that separate these cultures, Gharem asks us to "pause" — literally and figuratively — in order to fully comprehend what we are seeing.
In the administration's view, these misapprehensions are not just incorrect but also at the root of so much American fear that Obama sees as a substantial threat in itself.
"One of the [Robert] Hayden quotes I go back to all along is how he says he wrote in order to correct the misapprehensions in African American history," she says.
It's hard to see how we solve a problem we have widespread misapprehensions about in either direction, and when a warning is overstated or inaccurate, it may sow more confusion than inspiration.
Contrary to the prevailing misapprehensions, our operation will help address the humanitarian dimension of the problem, contribute to the preservation of the unity of the country and add to the political process.
What transpired from that galvanizing moment and over the course of the next half-century was a movement to upend the prejudices and misapprehensions that had taken such deep root in the national psyche.
In a blog post titled "What Stranger Things Didn't Get Quite-So-Right About the Energy Department," digital content specialist Paul Lester debunks a series of misapprehensions you may have after watching the Netflix show.
Stone, who has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, blamed the media for creating "misapprehensions and misconceptions" about him in a statement to Reuters, arguing it was press reports that had triggered Mueller's interest in his involvement.
But now Obama is making it his mission to take on those misapprehensions directly, to reshape how Americans think about the threats they face, and the role and possibilities of American power in addressing them.
Courtesy the artist; Corvi-Mora, London; and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York One of the most persistent misapprehensions that exists between artists and viewers—and writers and readers—concerns the relative weight of content and form.
From the notion that active-duty skills do not transfer well to the workforce to the idea that all veterans suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, these misapprehensions fuel a false narrative about the American veteran.
In an emailed statement to Reuters on Friday, Stone said he believed that Mueller's scrutiny on him stemmed from "misapprehensions and misconceptions" created by the media, and that he would ultimately be exonerated of any alleged wrongdoing.
To be clear, I am not saying that you can't be a Christian if you believe that Jesus got important things wrong, that his human nature exposed him to errors and mistakes and misapprehensions that found their way into his teaching.
Here, Segalen records the dreamlike experience of finding a rupture in what he sees as the Real: the villagers' misapprehensions about their ruler mark the intrusion of the Imagination and he cannot bring himself to intervene in what he deems as the villagers' contradiction of Imagination and Real.
Rock 'n' roll has always been about maintaining the impression that you're perpetually off your face, which is perhaps why many people believe Keith Richards and Tom Waits are still at it, even if they've both been sober for a long time (although neither seems too eager to correct any misapprehensions).
"Those of us who were involved in the punk movement vastly overestimated the political importance of what we were doing," says Joseph Heath, a Canadian professor of philosophy, writer and lecturer, who wrote the book Filthy Lucre: Economics for People Who Hate Capitalism, and co-wrote The Rebel Sell with Andrew Potter, about how they believe the counterculture has been a massive failure, despite misapprehensions that it was successful.
He talks to his blind girlfriend Amlu (Rohini) about what happened and Amlu finally talks reason into Gopal. Gopal arrives the moment Bhuvana is giving birth, Gopal therefore realises his misapprehensions and the purity of Bhuvana's heart and they make up.
Note: A number of misapprehensions as to Singer's statuary output exist both in books and on the web. The following works have no connection with Singer's art foundry in Frome: Eros in Piccadilly Circus, the lions in Trafalgar Square or Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens.
Furthermore, reporting about Europe is determined by national views and national and individual journalistic practices and thus lacking coherence and proper context.Kopper, G. (2007), p. 187. The AIM study concludes that these daily deficiencies, neglects and misapprehensions lead to myopic reporting about European matters.Kopper, G. (2007), p. 187.
He thought it important to follow learning by questions "to enhance the clarity and stability of cognitive structure by correcting misapprehensions, and deferring the instruction of new matter until there had been such clarification and elucidation".Pressey S.L. 1951. Teaching machines (and learning theory) crisis. J. Applied Psychology 47, 1-6.
Welchman is credited with developing this technique. However, Welchman's main contributions were to the process of breaking the German Enigma machine cipher. Welchman became head of Hut Six, the section at BP responsible for breaking German Army and Air Force Enigma ciphers. An early publication containing several misapprehensions that are corrected in an addendum in the 1997 edition.
Pasley left for England in May 1861, in the steamship Great Britain. He left Melbourne amid popular demonstrations of regret. On arrival in England in August 1861 Pasley was appointed commanding royal engineer at Gravesend. In 1862 he read a paper before the Royal United Service Institution on the operations in New Zealand, to correct some misapprehensions on the subject which existed in the public mind with regard to his old general.
On April 11, 1873, Modoc leader Kintpuash (also known as Captain Jack) killed the unarmed Canby and several members of his party during peace talks. Canby had written frankly to Louisa about his misapprehensions over the negotiations with the Modocs. A chief concern (which proved to be prophetic) was that Captain Jack so feared treachery that he might be capable of committing treachery preemptively. On the day of his death Canby received a letter from his wife in Portland.
His chapter concluded, :It may be said that to take advantage of a man's credulity, to exploit his misapprehensions, to capitalize on his ignorance is morally reprehensible—and this may well be the case. [. . .] Where, then does the author of this chapter stand on these difficult and reproachful questions? I do not quite know—and I am neither contented nor arrogant in that unsatisfactory answer. But this should be said: a strategy is an instrument for winning.
Elizabeth Grey of CBC spent a day with him and submitted her report for the broadcasting prize of 1985. His first interview after arrival in Ottawa was on "Crossfire" which immediately launched public interest in his frank and direct approach to what he regarded as the Canadian misapprehensions about South Africa's future. Southam News' E Kaye Fulton followed his activities through Canada for a week and wrote a thought-provoking article which caught the nuances of the South African diplomacy in transition.
A modern understanding of the site emerged during the 1970s and 1980s, through scholarly interpretation and in excavations by the Suffolk County Council team,J. Blatchly and K. Wade, 'Excavations at Ipswich Blackfriars in 1897 and 1976', Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History XXXIV Part 1 (1977), pp. 25-34 (Suffolk Institute pdf). by which the position of the lost Blackfriars church was recognized and revealed, much of the original plan was clarified or confirmed, and former misapprehensions were corrected.
Menand wrote: > Lasch was not saying that things were better in the 1950s, as conservatives > offended by countercultural permissiveness probably took him to be saying. > He was not saying that things were better in the 1960s, as former activists > disgusted by the 'me-ism' of the seventies are likely to have imagined. He > was diagnosing a condition that he believed had originated in the nineteenth > century.Menand, 206 Lasch attempted to correct many of these misapprehensions with The Minimal Self in 1984.
Lack further wrote that Stephen Moss evaluates Montagu's contribution as "of vital importance" to the growth of birdwatching, writing in 2005 thatMoss, 2005. p. 19 Moss observes that Montagu cleared up many "misapprehensions and errors", enabling later ornithologists especially William MacGillivray and William Yarrell to write their "seminal avifaunas" early in the Victorian era. Mark Cocker and Richard Mabey in their Birds Britannica note that Montagu took the association of the distribution and lifestyle of the stone curlew and the great bustard to mean that they were closely related.Cocker and Mabey, 2005. p.
In his last novel he wrote: ″Each of us who has been on this earth is a tiny enigma frequently unspoken for various reasons and is just a one-way passenger who comes and goes seldom leaving some tangible trail. All of us in the final reckoning, no matter how vain, are merely dust for the wind, to be blown about whilst yet alive along with all our absurd passions, misapprehensions, intolerances, manias for achieving justice, fears, tom-foolery....″Stamatov,V. Hostage and fugitive Fatherland 1997 p.7 He died in Sofia, Bulgaria in 1998.
With the publication of Compendium of Materia Medica, not only did it improve the classification of how traditional medicine was compiled and formatted, but it was also an important medium in improving the credibility and scientific values of biology classification of both plants and animals. The compendium corrected many mistakes and misapprehensions of the nature of herbs and diseases. Li also included many new herbs, adding his own discoveries of particular drugs and their efficacity and function, as well as more detailed descriptions of the results of experiments. It also has notes and records on general medical data and medical history.
It has since been shown, however, that this hypothesis was based on incomplete evidence and historical misapprehensions. In particular, twentieth-century scholarship focused on the presence in the Libellus of what appeared to be an impossibly lax rule regarding consanguinity and marriage, a rule that (it was thought) Gregory could not possibly have endorsed. It is now known that this rule is not in fact as lax as historians had thought, and moreover that the rule is fully consistent with Gregory's style and mode of thought.K. Ubl, Inzestverbot und Gesetzgebung: die Konstruktion eines Verbrechens (300–1100), Millennium- Studien 20 (Berlin, 2008), pp.
In addition to criticism, his ideas were often oversimplified, misrepresented, distorted or exaggerated for various purposes. This heightened the controversy. In 1962, the WHO published Deprivation of Maternal Care: A Reassessment of its Effects to which Mary Ainsworth, Bowlby's close colleague, contributed with his approval, to present the recent research and developments and to address misapprehensions. Bowlby's work was misinterpreted to mean that any separation from the natural mother, any experience of institutional care or a multiplicity of "mothers" necessarily resulted in severe emotional deprivation and sometimes, that all children undergoing such experiences would develop into "affectionless children".
He continued "I trust you appreciate the gravity of immediate situation, and will produce additional troops asked for particularly infantry, with minimum delay". When Potts arrived back in Port Moresby on 12 September Allen organised a meeting between Potts, Rowell and himself. Given a chance to relate the difficulties he had faced, and correct some misapprehensions, it appears Potts was able to mollify Rowell. Soon after, war correspondent Chester Wilmot, who had also been over the Owen Stanley Ranges on foot and seen the fighting, was able to corroborate Potts' account in a meeting with Rowell.
Forthright and exacting, the boy questions the officer and obtains information about a shipboard word game competition - and disabuses the bemused woman as to her misapprehensions regarding his advanced intellectual development. Teddy proceeds to the Sport Deck and locates his little sister, Booper, at play with another young passenger. Booper is a domineering and hateful child, contrasting sharply with her older brother's equanimity. Teddy, with firmness, politely exhorts the girl to return with the camera to the cabin and report to their mother. Ignoring his sister’s verbal ripostes, he reminds her to meet him shortly for their swimming lesson at the swimming pool.
Furthermore, 'If it is desired to strike a mortal blow at private property, one must attack it not only as a material state of affairs, but also as activity, as labour. It is one of the greatest misapprehensions to speak of free, human, social labour, of labour without private property. “Labour” by its very nature is unfree, unhuman, unsocial activity, determined by private property and creating private property.' Under Capitalism '[t]he capitalist functions only as capital personified, capital as a person, just as the worker only functions as the personification of labour, which belongs to him as torment, as exertion'.
The Kinsey Reports, which together sold three-quarters of a million copies and were translated into thirteen languages, may be considered as some of the most successful and influential scientific books of the 20th century. They were also associated with a change in the public perception of sexuality. In the 1960s, following the introduction of the first oral contraceptive, this change was to be expressed in the sexual revolution. Additionally, in 1966 Masters and Johnson would publish the first of two texts cataloguing their investigations into the physiology of sex, breaking taboos and misapprehensions similar to those Kinsey had confronted more than a decade earlier in a closely related field.
Decapitation is quickly fatal to humans and most animals. Unconsciousness occurs within 10 seconds without circulating oxygenated blood (brain ischemia). Cell death and irreversible brain damage occurs after 3–6 minutes with no oxygen, due to excitotoxicity. Some anecdotes suggest more extended persistence of human consciousness after decapitation,Gabriel Beaurieux, writing in 1905, quoted in , cited by but most doctors consider this unlikely and consider such accounts to be misapprehensions of reflexive twitching rather than deliberate movement, since deprivation of oxygen must cause nearly immediate coma and death ("[Consciousness is] probably lost within 2–3 seconds, due to a rapid fall of intracranial perfusion of blood").
According to Didion, "This book represents an exploration into my own confusions about the place and the way in which I grew up ... misapprehensions and misunderstandings so much a part of who I became that I can still to this day confront them only obliquely." Where I Was From is also in parts a retrospective on Didion's work, examining how these "confusions" affected books such as Run, River."But the idea of a prelapsarian California underpins all Didion's writing - not just her novel, Run River (1963), which is permeated by 'a tenacious (and, as I see it now, pernicious) mood of nostalgia'". Morrison, Blake.
203 > of Barron Report Barron also stated in his Report, > It must be said that when interviewed by the Inquiry [Holroyd] made no > effort to avoid any questions asked of him; nor did he appear to be > withholding information. He gave his answers openly, fairly and with > conviction. He is aware that he has been misquoted and misinterpreted on > occasion and has sought to correct any misapprehensions where they have > arisen. He has also shown a willingness to take on board evidence and > information which seem to contradict his claims, though for the most part he > has maintained the truth of his allegations and of their provenance.
Grecian columns of singular disproportion form the main structure of bedsteads, tables, and cabinets. These columns are noted for their clumsy thickness, and in one of the first misapprehensions of the classic that mark the style, they rise from huge spherical clusters of foliage, usually the acanthus. At about half their length, these columns are frequently broken by another huge spherical cluster; on this sometimes half the foliage growing downward, half growing upward, and divided in the middle by a careful strap and buckle; occasionally the upper half of this globe is absent. The lower part of the columns is often covered with arabesques, and the upper half merely fluted, or else covered with a fine imbricate carving.
By using narrative that adopts the tone and vocabulary of a particular character (in this case, Elizabeth), Austen invites the reader to follow events from Elizabeth's viewpoint, sharing her prejudices and misapprehensions. "The learning curve, while undergone by both protagonists, is disclosed to us solely through Elizabeth's point of view and her free indirect speech is essential ... for it is through it that we remain caught, if not stuck, within Elizabeth's misprisions." The few times the reader is allowed to gain further knowledge of another character's feelings, is through the letters exchanged in this novel. Darcy's first letter to Elizabeth is an example of this as through his letter, the reader and Elizabeth are both given knowledge of Wickham's true character.
The final results of the Anderson Report in 1965 declared: > "The Board heard evidence from a highly qualified radiologist who has made a > special study of radiation and its effects. He said that Hubbard's knowledge > of radiation, as displayed by his writings in All About Radiation, was the > 'sort of knowledge that perhaps a boy who has read Intermediate Physics > might, with a lot of misapprehensions and lack of understanding, > demonstrate'.... From this witness's evidence it is apparent that Hubbard is > completely incompetent to deal with the subject of radiation and that his > knowledge of nuclear physics is distorted, inaccurate, mistaken and > negligible. No evidence was called which disputed in any way these > conclusions." Report of the Board of Enquiry into Scientology, by Kevin > Victor Anderson, Q.C., Published 1965 by the State of Victoria, Australia.
In June 1940, Clarke was recruited by her former academic supervisor, Gordon Welchman, to the Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS;). She worked at Bletchley Park in the section known as Hut 8 and quickly became the only female practitioner of Banburismus, a cryptanalytic process developed by Alan Turing which reduced the need for bombes —electromechanical devices as used by British cryptologists Welchman and Turing to decipher German encrypted messages during World War II. New edition updated with an addendum consisting of a 1986 paper written by Welchman that corrects his misapprehensions in the 1982 edition. Clarke's first work promotion was to Linguist Grade which was designed to earn her extra money despite the fact that she did not speak another language. This promotion was a recognition of her workload and contributions to the team.
There was criticism of the confusion of the effects of privation (no primary attachment figure) and deprivation (loss of the primary attachment figure) and in particular, a failure to distinguish between the effects of the lack of a primary attachment figure and the other forms of deprivation and understimulation that may affect children in institutions.Rutter (1981) Maternal Deprivation Reassessed, Second edition, Harmondsworth, Penguin. The monograph was also used for political purposes to claim any separation from the mother was deleterious to discourage women from working and leaving their children in daycare by governments concerned about maximising employment for returned and returning servicemen. In 1962 WHO published Deprivation of maternal care: A Reassessment of its Effects to which Mary Ainsworth, Bowlby's close colleague, contributed with his approval, to present the recent research and developments and to address misapprehensions.

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