We're in a brave new world now, wherein Facebook and Twitter posts are mistaken for social interaction and reality TV is mistaken for reality.
|
|
At this point, it's kind of getting weird that all these people are being mistaken for Patel, and that he isn't being mistaken for any of them.
|
|
I guess that's sometimes mistaken for the tall poppy syndrome.
|
|
It will not be mistaken for your aunt's ES 350.
|
|
It should not be mistaken for a lack of seriousness.
|
|
Fishermen say they fear being mistaken for militants and shot.
|
|
But this attitude shouldn't be mistaken for cynicism or laziness.
|
|
Movie theaters are mistaken for phone booths for these folks.
|
|
Ehrenreich would never be mistaken for Ford in any sense.
|
|
" The family said they're mistaken for triplets "all the time.
|
|
"Don't want to be mistaken for wanting it," she says.
|
|
Officials said the party had been mistaken for Islamist militants.
|
|
I have been mistaken for being bigger than him, though.
|
|
In court, the men were sometimes mistaken for their clients.
|
|
Based on his personality, he's probably been mistaken for furniture.
|
|
You know, I've been mistaken for him on OKCupid. What?
|
|
Sometimes she was even mistaken for a lawyer, she said.
|
|
To start, caucusing shouldn't be mistaken for a traditional election.
|
|
" — JIMMY FALLON "It was a fox mistaken for a dog!
|
|
From a distance it could be mistaken for a monarch.
|
|
For some reason, we were often mistaken for one another.
|
|
"His warmth should never be mistaken for weakness," he said.
|
|
Like Sanders, he could easily be mistaken for Larry David.
|
|
Some Wandelweiser pieces could be mistaken for obscure meditation practices.
|
|
But they may be mistaken for someone of menial position.
|
|
Rashes caused by breast cancer can also be mistaken for eczema.
|
|
From a distance it could be mistaken for a resting animal.
|
|
Work I'd mistaken for effortlessness, taken for granted, failed to notice.
|
|
Leakey does not want this to mistaken for a celebration, however.
|
|
He's often mistaken for "Lord of the Rings" star Elijah Wood.
|
|
Update: Apparently, Maroon 5 is cool with being mistaken for Coldplay.
|
|
This Broegel Bock beer could easily be mistaken for Shiner Bock.
|
|
From afar, the proceedings could be mistaken for an afternoon cookout.
|
|
We're mistaken for each other, but we're not mistaken about ourselves.
|
|
Her facility and evident visual literacy shouldn't be mistaken for pastiche.
|
|
Despite being a lawyer, I am routinely mistaken for a criminal.
|
|
I think I sometimes get mistaken for Sansa Stark as well.
|
|
If one didn't know better, they could be mistaken for siblings.
|
|
The police said he had been mistaken for another gang member.
|
|
Number of times I have been mistaken for another black woman.
|
|
They could have been mistaken for reporters or merely diligent fans.
|
|
"Leah, the Forsaken" won't be mistaken for a long-lost classic.
|
|
But it's never going to be mistaken for the real thing.
|
|
The content you consume is easily mistaken for the real world.
|
|
It didn't help that I was constantly mistaken for a Uighur.
|
|
Ava doesn't just get mistaken for being siblings with her mom, though.
|
|
Terra preta should not be mistaken for compost or fertiliser, Matzusaka says.
|
|
Fake celebrity porn seamless enough to be mistaken for the real thing.
|
|
The compact size of a bullet vibrator shouldn't be mistaken for weakness.
|
|
And it's not just Witherspoon who gets mistaken for her big sister.
|
|
Keanu Reeves brought his mother, who was briefly mistaken for his girlfriend.
|
|
I had short hair, so I was often mistaken for a male.
|
|
I get mistaken for a man all the time...it's no secret.
|
|
Muslims—and those mistaken for Muslims—became a familiar phenomenon in the
|
|
In a bubble, any suggestive detail is easily mistaken for absolute proof.
|
|
For all their effort, the team still often gets mistaken for robots.
|
|
And in fairness, his "hostility" towards questions can be mistaken for honesty.
|
|
" Stage 5: Acceptance "Acceptance should not be mistaken for a happy stage.
|
|
In Afghanistan, American aircraft pummel a hospital mistaken for a Taliban redoubt.
|
|
Molded from 21-karat gold, they might be mistaken for purloined antiquities.
|
|
But Barr should not be mistaken for a mainstream or moderate pick.
|
|
"The Beach Bum" should not be mistaken for a one-man show.
|
|
"I get mistaken for that guy all the time," the congressman added.
|
|
After all, his driver had just been killed, apparently mistaken for him.
|
|
Read "Police body camera shows Pokemon Go player mistaken for bank robber"
|
|
But the acronym can spark confusion when mistaken for a genuine name.
|
|
If you try hard enough, you might even be mistaken for white.
|
|
She would still face discrimination, often being mistaken for a cleaning lady.
|
|
They are not to be mistaken for something they make movies about.
|
|
The 110-year-old structure could easily be mistaken for a church.
|
|
He is accustomed, he added, to being mistaken for another bearded fellow.
|
|
Rauschenberg's set dressings, in particular, might be mistaken for works created autonomously.
|
|
Dog bites were instead mistaken for some of the wounds, the attorney claimed.
|
|
Advertisers have a desire for efficiency that can sometimes be mistaken for indolence.
|
|
A day may come when I am not mistaken for another brown actor.
|
|
I was a drama nerd, but I'm often mistaken for a horse girl.
|
|
Busy Philipps was just mistaken for another famous figure in the United States.
|
|
Patmore, whose B & B has been mistaken for Ye Olde House of Strumpetry.
|
|
Sadly, for most untrained ears, loudness is mistaken for a sign of quality.
|
|
And so, therefore, my motive could be mistaken for bigotry and xenophobia. Absolutely.
|
|
We've all been mistaken for someone, but a high-ranking White House staffer?
|
|
There's nothing worse than being mistaken for someone you really, really don't like.
|
|
Long mistaken for fungi, they are now classed as a type of amoeba.
|
|
Bacterial Vaginosis Bacterial vaginosis, aka BV, is often mistaken for a yeast infection.
|
|
You can see why the Versa is often mistaken for an Apple Watch.
|
|
The metal clip encircling its case could be mistaken for a tie clip.
|
|
Fishing spiders, commonly mistaken for wolf spiders, are known to live near water.
|
|
The Dutch approach should not be mistaken for an ideological reluctance to integrate.
|
|
WATCH: So … About That Time Aisha Tyler Was Mistaken for LeBron James Hydration
|
|
Even the town's name, Avalon, could be mistaken for a fictional Disney town.
|
|
Black's laissez-faire tone should, however, not be mistaken for an unmotivated athlete.
|
|
Petraeus told a story about being mistaken for Ben Affleck at the bank.
|
|
In Los Angeles's Koreatown, a bedroom might be mistaken for an art gallery.
|
|
And one fanny pack could easily be mistaken for wrapped-around sweater sleeves.
|
|
Though commonly mistaken for a chef, Mr. Kalra never claimed to be one.
|
|
It looks like a baby shark and has sometimes been mistaken for one.
|
|
Being mistaken for pregnant (at least half a dozen times) didn't do it.
|
|
You wouldn't want to be mistaken for a part of the food chain.
|
|
"By no means should my vote be mistaken for voting Trump," she said.
|
|
Never mind that it can be mistaken for any or all of these.
|
|
Still, from 20 paces, the Genesis face is easily mistaken for an Audi.
|
|
I still get mistaken for a wife or caretaker of a male veteran.
|
|
At times, the incredibly detailed video could be mistaken for a live-action movie.
|
|
Meacham recalled a story of when he was once mistaken for author John Grisham.
|
|
The movie couldn't be mistaken for endorsing hate, but it is not a satire.
|
|
"Repetition of information, even if false, can often be mistaken for accuracy," he wrote.
|
|
He has an amazing calm way about him that shouldn't be mistaken for shyness.
|
|
Being mistaken for a celebrity isn't the worst problem to have in the world.
|
|
Being mistaken for Salinger has got Sid thinking about the man he could be.
|
|
But that's a giant headset that won't be mistaken for fashion glasses anytime soon.
|
|
These glasses could "easily be mistaken for fine crystal," according to Bed Bath & Beyond.
|
|
Also at Franklin's funeral, Grande was mistaken for a Taco Bell food menu item.
|
|
While she could easily be mistaken for a typical 24-year-old, she isn't.
|
|
Optimists, of course, are frequently disappointed, which is why we're often mistaken for cynics.
|
|
There's always a danger that short-term trends can be mistaken for historical inevitabilities.
|
|
Kepler observed other events that could be mistaken for planet transits by a computer.
|
|
Public discretion should not be mistaken for passivity in preventing and punishing sexual harassment.
|
|
But, let's face it: There's no avoiding them being mistaken for Grandpa's cataract glasses.
|
|
The iPad Pro 10.5 could easily be mistaken for a 9.7-inch iPad Pro.
|
|
Sikh men are often mistaken for Muslims due to their turbans and long beards.
|
|
Some tiny home living rooms could easily be mistaken for a regular-sized home.
|
|
In such places, the blood and fever of leukemia are often mistaken for malaria.
|
|
The presentation at the conference, he said, could never be mistaken for anti-Muslim.
|
|
There are hints and clues, and there are subtle signs easily mistaken for wonders.
|
|
A mousse doesn't set, an ice cream doesn't freeze, salt is mistaken for sugar.
|
|
"She could easily have been mistaken for Catherine Deneuve," Mr. Villagra, her successor, said.
|
|
The imagery could be mistaken for a hundredth-generation photocopy of some arbitrary original.
|
|
A dress-up costume can be mistaken for a uniform, including by its wearer.
|
|
Musician Lewis Capaldi said he was mistaken for a seat filler during the show.
|
|
He had been released so quickly that he risked being mistaken for an escapee.
|
|
As it turned out, one rare, neglected tropical disease had been mistaken for another.
|
|
"Mad Men" star Kiernan Shipka was mistaken for Emma Watson in an Instagram post.
|
|
Two Nigerian students, in Croatia for a sports tournament, were mistaken for undocumented migrants.
|
|
But such a report should not be mistaken for the end of Mueller's probe.
|
|
Seen from the right perspective, the critter might be mistaken for a vibrantly colored brain.
|
|
On October 3rd Microsoft published a book that could easily be mistaken for a manifesto.
|
|
Simone De La Rue's client list could be mistaken for the guestlist of the Oscars.
|
|
The common denominator between all of them, though: They can be easily mistaken for STIs.
|
|
This is the second time Reeves' red carpet date has been mistaken for someone else.
|
|
Shakers dress plainly and might be mistaken for Amish, but they do not shun society.
|
|
Though she was briefly mistaken for his girlfriend, Taylor herself is an accomplished Hollywood figure.
|
|
The other symptoms, like fullness or constipation, could be easily mistaken for another gastrointestinal problem.
|
|
It's possible these two are just very close, and their affection was mistaken for romance.
|
|
I often hope my glass of seltzer will be mistaken for a gin and tonic.
|
|
Or being mistaken for a man half the time, which I am not offended by.
|
|
This wouldn't be the first time these kinds of balloons were mistaken for extraterrestrial visitors.
|
|
Cuba Gooding Jr. doesn't think there are racial overtones when he's mistaken for Terrence Howard.
|
|
This isn't the first time history the rock has been mistaken for something more lively.
|
|
With its large forehead, the Pixel 4 could easily be mistaken for the Pixel 2.
|
|
She is often mistaken for someone who thinks you shouldn't own anything, but that's wrong.
|
|
However, the yacht, named Fountainhead, is often mistaken for belonging to billionaire investor Mark Cuban.
|
|
Little plastic bits get mistaken for food by fish, sea turtles, birds and other wildlife.
|
|
He's a college-educated artist and writer — who is frequently mistaken for a drug dealer.
|
|
As he outlined his own field protocols, he could have been mistaken for a rabbi.
|
|
One day I'm carded trying to buy Coppertone, suddenly I'm mistaken for my own pallbearer.
|
|
I am a transgender man who is regularly mistaken for a woman in public places.
|
|
But one mystery lingered: Who was the woman everyone had mistaken for Val-Jean McDonald?
|
|
Bai Ling's daughter, eyes rolled up in her head, could be mistaken for sleeping child.
|
|
When women tweeted about tech, or anything serious, really, they were often mistaken for men.
|
|
Planes Mistaken for Stars might have just been the most overlooked band of their time.
|
|
You'll laugh, but on a few occasions the yard has been mistaken for a park.
|
|
As a man of Indian descent, if I'm mistaken for anything, it's for a cardiologist.
|
|
To say nothing of how often "excellence" and "respectability" are tragically mistaken for each other.
|
|
She identifies as Native American and African-American, though she is often mistaken for Latino.
|
|
Maxine Waters, certainly never mistaken for a moderate, puts herself squarely in the latter camp.
|
|
I've actually been mistaken for a kid on playgrounds because of the way I behave.
|
|
So many pies appear in the nearby lounge, Estuary could be mistaken for a pizzeria.
|
|
In the film, three men are mistaken for Army soldiers and are flown to Iraq.
|
|
He could be mistaken for an eager pupil if he were not the stern teacher.
|
|
He uses a wheelchair and says that he's sometimes mistaken for a patient while working.
|
|
If it's not her engagement ring, it could definitely be mistaken for a wedding-related rock.
|
|
At the feet of a luminescent Tinkerbell statue, the precipitation could be mistaken for fairy dust.
|
|
Grande was also mistaken for a Taco Bell food menu item by Bishop Charles H. Ellis.
|
|
It was a reference to an obscure Iranian film, but was subsequently mistaken for a porno.
|
|
Instagram influencer Akeisha Land often gets mistaken for Meghan Markle both online and in real life.
|
|
Bankers themselves are afraid to deal with loans pragmatically, because that often gets mistaken for cronyism.
|
|
Gear for real-life superheroes In fact, some areas could easily be mistaken for superhero workshops.
|
|
Unlike hoverboards, the tiny spinners could easily be mistaken for harmless trinkets—but fire is fire.
|
|
In October Microsoft published a book that could easily be mistaken for a political party's manifesto.
|
|
After years of being mistaken for spammers and scammers the Arnolds have decided to take action.
|
|
Its graphic pattern, thick knit, and rounded shape might even be mistaken for a Proenza Schouler.
|
|
I guess it would be a toss-up between LCD Soundsystem and Planes Mistaken For Stars.
|
|
But Gates said Tillerson's business relationship with Putin is being mistaken for a close personal friendship.
|
|
And we live in an age of instant gratification where mere activity is mistaken for progress.
|
|
The harassment also hits cisgender (non-trans) women who are mistaken for men or trans women.
|
|
Western Digital's "My Passport" line of portable external hard drives have never been mistaken for fashionable.
|
|
It's only one syllable, and could be easily mistaken for some kind of grunt or hiccup.
|
|
A cheerful woman who favors large gold hoop earrings, she is often mistaken for a schoolteacher.
|
|
Muskrats are frequently mistaken for beavers, and although both are rodents, they are not closely related.
|
|
Chef mistaken for terrorist There has been one confirmed case of mistaken identity during the attack.
|
|
I actually was mistaken for Cesar Millan, the dog whisperer, while at a dog training class.
|
|
And this applies not just to immigrants, but to everyone who could be mistaken for one.
|
|
Despite the bestiary of creatures, "Tale of Tales" should not be mistaken for a pastoral idyll.
|
|
"Mistaken for love/It wasn't love, it was a perfect illusion," she belts, angry and tremulous.
|
|
Past administrations' attempts to engage China have been mistaken for weakness by the Marxist Leninist regime.
|
|
It's that it works so well that it can't be mistaken for anything but a machine.
|
|
Sometimes, tragically, a gun is used by its owner to kill family members mistaken for intruders.
|
|
An I train could have been mistaken for a 1, or an O train for zero.
|
|
On any other day, the noise could have been mistaken for a wedding or a graduation.
|
|
She knew she risked being mistaken for a protester because she was dressed in civilian clothes.
|
|
I'll remember that I live inside a body so petite it's often mistaken for a girl's.
|
|
Conversation is slow, limited, and stilted, and none of these bots could be mistaken for humans.
|
|
Toward the end of her life, she was sometimes patronizingly mistaken for a cute old lady.
|
|
Her most recent book, "Blue Mistaken for Sky," was published by Autumn House Press in 2018.
|
|
Her most recent book, "Blue Mistaken for Sky," was published by Autumn House Press in 2018.
|
|
Reynolds told Entertainment Weekly that the picture was just a result of slack jaw mistaken for sadness.
|
|
In return, they asked for police protection — they didn't want to be mistaken for child abductors themselves.
|
|
That might be chalked up to my appearance: my Colombian-Indian mix was often mistaken for Tunisian.
|
|
The first symptoms are usually itching and a rash, and they can be mistaken for bug bites.
|
|
When he spoke, it was in a deliberate way that could have easily been mistaken for quiet.
|
|
The group has now stopped using tents for gatherings, fearing they may be mistaken for military targets.
|
|
Shepherd commented with heart emojis and told a different commenter she didn't mind being mistaken for Spencer.
|
|
Hannah Simone hasn't met Kim Kardashian West, but she's definitely been mistaken for her in the past!
|
|
Let's just appreciate it, because one day your knuckle may not be mistaken for a face. Help!
|
|
I am a thinly built, thirty-something woman who is often mistaken for being in my twenties.
|
|
But it poses its own set of dangers—chiefly that it might be mistaken for strong AI!
|
|
At first glance, Pauline van Dongen's newest design could be mistaken for a just a regular tee.
|
|
In fairness, this isn't the first time English author Evelyn Waugh has been mistaken for a woman.
|
|
If not for fashion of the time, the clip could be mistaken for an iPhone 6S clip.
|
|
From far away I perceive the dots as a solid plane, easily mistaken for concrete painted green.
|
|
It's what makes TV interesting, and Donald Trump will never be mistaken for anything less than interesting.
|
|
A local NBC affiliate ran with the story, which could be mistaken for a rewritten press release.
|
|
At 70, he could be mistaken for a resident, but Tasaka isn't thinking of retiring anytime soon.
|
|
"It had a husband-and-wife team directing, whose arrogance had been mistaken for talent," he recalled.
|
|
Nagasu says she did not mean to be mistaken for ungracious or a whiner or a narcissist.
|
|
You might not expect famous people to get mistaken for other famous people, but it does happen.
|
|
With her brown skin, black hair, and Hindu name, Gabbard is sometimes mistaken for an Indian-American.
|
|
It's possible the family was deliberately targeted, or that they were mistaken for a rival drug cartel.
|
|
At first glance, the dark shape might be mistaken for a sunspot but it's far too dark.
|
|
In another, teens at a party suck on a flash drive that they've mistaken for a Juul.
|
|
A popular rosé de Provence, Château Pigoudet, is nearly colorless; it could be mistaken for white wine.
|
|
They are so coated in frosty rime that they could be mistaken for towers of shaving foam.
|
|
As she explains, it's not rare that she's mistaken for the stylist or an assistant on set.
|
|
It's slim enough for hallways, but tall enough that it won't get mistaken for a coat rack.
|
|
"The alt-right is too sophisticated to be mistaken for a mindless knee-jerk reaction," they write.
|
|
The Etsy headquarters in Dumbo, Brooklyn, for example, could easily be mistaken for an indoor botanical garden.
|
|
I'm regularly stunned by the cruelty that's mistaken for cleverness and the inhumanity that's confused with conviction.
|
|
No matter how skillfully produced, a Cameo cannot be mistaken for a genuine message from a celebrity.
|
|
One of the farmers, Yang Zhifa, recalled finding a warrior's head, which was mistaken for a jar.
|
|
Capaldi was mistaken for a "seat-filler" at the event, which he joked about on his Twitter.
|
|
One tiny object measuring just 3.6 centimeters (1.4 inches) was initially overlooked and mistaken for a bead.
|
|
The odor Juuls produce is subtle and could easily be mistaken for a lotion or body spray.
|
|
Behind his long, gloomy face and spectacles this man could never be mistaken for a boudoir mechanic.
|
|
Kendricks could be mistaken for a coach rather than competitor by the way he interacts with opponents.
|
|
But much like any caricature, it should not be mistaken for an accurate portrayal of its subject.
|
|
LG's solution is to roll it into an austere rectangular box that's easily mistaken for modernist furniture.
|
|
"I've been mistaken for a Mexican and an Iranian," he told CNBC in a recent phone interview.
|
|
But Maduro's expanding control of Venezuela's institutions should not be mistaken for an expansion of real power.
|
|
Including a projection of the signature "6" in London, that was also mistaken for the album artwork.
|
|
To say that images are powerful shouldn't be mistaken for high praise of how this movie looks.
|
|
All produce fever and general weakness, some come with chills and headaches—symptoms easily mistaken for the flu.
|
|
Jom Wo's face was starting to leather from 13 years of fighting; his shyness was mistaken for maturity.
|
|
Counselor Marshall Levine, 72, appears to have been mistaken for someone else who once occupied the same office.
|
|
As a young-looking female attorney, I'm always trying to avoid being mistaken for an assistant or receptionist.
|
|
In the early weeks of pregnancy, some women experience "breakthrough bleeding" -- which can be mistaken for a period.
|
|
Model Rain Dove grew up hearing that she looked "boyish and ugly," often getting mistaken for a man.
|
|
I'm talking, I could be mistaken for having just gotten out of the shower on morning two, oily.
|
|
Voters' grumbles about this or that policy, says Mr Gentiloni, should not be mistaken for full-blown Euroscepticism.
|
|
Respiratory syncytial virus or RSV has symptoms that can also be mistaken for the flu (or a cold).
|
|
Whoopi Goldberg is taking the high road after being mistaken for Oprah Winfrey at the Oscars Sunday night.
|
|
The $14.99 SOCL300 come in a tiny cardboard package that could be mistaken for a packet of pills.
|
|
With his clean-cut looks, Mr Lamb, a practising Catholic, was at times mistaken for a Jehovah's Witness.
|
|
What follows is a 45-minute session that results in lengthy lashes that are often mistaken for falsies.
|
|
During the family's hospital stay, their newborn was mistaken for another child and surgery was performed on him.
|
|
A Fitbit won't be mistaken for jewelry; it's not high-fashion, though it may try; it's a Fitbit.
|
|
Johnson, whose parents had both been enslaved, was so light-skinned that he could be mistaken for white.
|
|
A woman named Emma Gonzalez was targeted by conspiracy theorists after she was mistaken for the Parkland, Fla.
|
|
The Rio offers an upscale interior that could easily be mistaken for that of a more expensive car.
|
|
Small pieces of plastic get mistaken for food and eaten by fish, sea turtles, birds and other wildlife.
|
|
LONDON — He may be turning 79 this month, but David Hockney shouldn't be mistaken for an aging technophobe.
|
|
"The initial symptoms can easily be mistaken for a less serious illness, costing valuable treatment time," Sullivan said.
|
|
" Manafort added that Brzezinski was mistaken for suggesting "there's not a lot of major Republicans coming to town.
|
|
In another, an Air Wisconsin flight was delayed when a professor's math equations were mistaken for terrorist code.
|
|
He takes great pride in the verisimilitude of his work, which is often mistaken for the real thing.
|
|
Afterward, they would paint the rocks bright colors to prevent them from being mistaken for common field rocks.
|
|
Even with the design upgrades, the big white boxes certainly won't be mistaken for luxury Italian sports cars.
|
|
Through a microscope, they looked like bacteria, and they had been mistaken for bacteria by all earlier microbiologists.
|
|
The next room could be mistaken for a disorderly classroom in which metal chairs have been strewn about.
|
|
He is mistaken for a terrorist, locked in a cage and subjected to a series of other humiliations.
|
|
Officials so frequently open conversations with, "Can we start on background?" that it might be mistaken for hello.
|
|
At least five escapees were killed in a shootout, along with a village official mistaken for an inmate.
|
|
You think that's incredible, in this country there's a Fox that gets mistaken for a legitimate news network.
|
|
It said that the plane flew close to a sensitive military site and was mistaken for a threat.
|
|
"They could also be mistaken for a political marriage, according to Time — "a merger of two family empires.
|
|
He submerged himself so passionately in the game that his drive to win was often mistaken for arrogance.
|
|
"A laughing emoji which at small sizes is often mistaken for being tears of sadness," reads the description.
|
|
Ever since I surgically rid myself of my sharply hooked Iranian nose, I've been mistaken for every nationality.
|
|
The teachers see an urgency to news literacy because, on the internet, misinformation can be mistaken for news.
|
|
A palm-size stick that charges via USB, it's easily mistaken for a flash drive to the uninitiated.
|
|
The designers may have been thinking of the three-leaf shamrock, often mistaken for a four-leaf clover.
|
|
According to NBC, authorities believe cheering, clapping and banging from Olympic viewers may have been mistaken for gunfire.
|
|
Soror: Latin for sister; never to be mistaken for sorority girl; a lifelong member of Alpha Kappa Alpha.
|
|
For weeks, he came to class wearing a head scarf, and was often mistaken for a Muslim girl.
|
|
This transition can lead to a sort of existential crisis that is often mistaken for PTSD, Junger argues.
|
|
Barrio said these can be easily mistaken for inflamed hair follicles at first, but they do not go away.
|
|
"This should not be mistaken for the sum total of our response," one official said in the press briefing.
|
|
From "Pantego," a rockabilly-influenced song to "Endless Summer," which could be mistaken for an early-2000s Against Me!
|
|
This not only protects the brand, but is perhaps a safety measure, so guests are not mistaken for employees.
|
|
When in its folded configuration, SitPack could be mistaken for a water bottle or a particularly stylish beer can.
|
|
With her wideset green eyes and long brown hair, Kathryn could easily be mistaken for the actress Katie Holmes.
|
|
Even his mention of the shooting in Kansas City left out that the victims were apparently mistaken for Muslim.
|
|
SEE IT: INNOCENT NOTE WRITTEN ON WOOLWORTH&aposS PACKAGE MISTAKEN FOR CURSE WORD Schnatter apologized for the remarks Wednesday.
|
|
The small kitchen/dining room of west end Toronto eatery The Depanneur could readily be mistaken for someone's home.
|
|
But Rousey's no-holds-barred shouldn't be mistaken for a lack of respect for what her public position means.
|
|
For over a decade, I've had experiences likes these: public instances where I have been mistaken for a man.
|
|
Instead, he is mistaken for the writer and realises that he has stumbled upon a way out for himself.
|
|
It's not an unreasonable thought; queer women are commonly mistaken for sisters, sometimes even when they're of different races.
|
|
Though they are commonly mistaken for jellyfish, bluebottles belong to the Siphonophora family and jellyfish belong to Medusozoa family.
|
|
This, the work of engineering a dozen minor miracles a day, so ordinary it could be mistaken for invisible.
|
|
They could probably be mistaken for stills from an original Netflix series that you haven't bothered to watch yet.
|
|
While the camera is noticeably bigger, the rest of the device could easily be mistaken for an iPhone 6S.
|
|
The ascendance of Donald Trump is often mistaken for a sudden turn in the history of the United States.
|
|
With their canary yellow shirts and big grins, the Colombian delegation could almost be mistaken for the Brazilian one.
|
|
But those who have come to know him also know that his courtliness should not be mistaken for weakness.
|
|
Observers have speculated that the attackers were part of a drug cartel and the victims were mistaken for rivals.
|
|
People with cerebral palsy are often mistaken for having a mental impairment, although the two are not necessarily linked.
|
|
Franchesca is an English Angora rabbit, which is commonly mistaken for a Pekingese dog, according to Guinness World Records.
|
|
They were probably migrants from Canada or around the Upper Great Lakes, and were most likely mistaken for coyotes.
|
|
In the ocean and along coastal waterways, they absorb toxic chemicals and are often mistaken for food by animals.
|
|
The "Master of None" star makes a joke about recently being mistaken for another Indian-American comic, Hasan Minhaj.
|
|
Various sex toys, including a vibrator, were mistaken for "suspicious content in a luggage piece," federal police told CNN.
|
|
Take Material Good, a watch retailer in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood that could be mistaken for an haute bachelor pad.
|
|
Schumer gets mistaken for Pitch Perfect's Fat Amy in one sketch, and sex is, per usual, a popular theme.
|
|
Andrews Air Force Base recently went on lockdown after an active shooter drill was mistaken for an actual incident.
|
|
While it could be mistaken for just another home, it is a place of outsize significance in aerospace history.
|
|
Maybe. I was also mistaken for Paul Yoon at an award ceremony where he won the Young Lions Award.
|
|
Increased cultural understanding among law enforcement is needed so that a cultural preference is not mistaken for a misdemeanor.
|
|
Despite recent advances in AI, we don't have replicants, and modern robots are definitely not easily mistaken for humans.
|
|
Energy is sometimes mistaken for acidity, which levels out sweetness in fruits and is necessary for balance in wines.
|
|
He is keen to point out that his shyness should not be mistaken for a lack of self-confidence.
|
|
A village official was also killed when he was mistaken for one of the escaped inmates, the police said.
|
|
Imagine losing a loved one because he or she is mistaken for another patient, leading to a medical error.
|
|
Foam also absorbs toxins faster than other plastics and is mistaken for food by marine life, Van Stone said.
|
|
I met him there that year, too, and he told this story about always being mistaken for Ben Stiller.
|
|
With his shaved head and his round architect-style glasses, he could be mistaken for a studio big shot.
|
|
Like my parents, and like many other black Americans, I have white skin and am often mistaken for white.
|
|
It might have been mistaken for a more joyous occasion, had a black stripe not cut across each badge.
|
|
A nude portrait of Mr. Tenney could be mistaken for a tangle of tree limbs, or a garden blooming.
|
|
I've been mistaken for Colson Whitehead — who has long dreads — Dinaw Mengestu, Ta-Nehisi a few times, you name it.
|
|
From the sounds of it, the office building behind the sign gets mistaken for the penis museum quite a bit.
|
|
The two women look unnervingly alike and, in fact, are mistaken for the other at a point in the film.
|
|
Other common symptoms include bloating, weight loss, constipation and blood in the stool, which can often be mistaken for hemorrhoids.
|
|
Reese Witherspoon and her daughter Ava Phillippe are the famous mother-daughter team most likely to be mistaken for sisters.
|
|
His next film, "A Gentleman", is an action-comedy where he plays a man who is mistaken for a criminal.
|
|
Her answer was so simple and honest it might have been mistaken for confession, were the tone not totally undemanding.
|
|
A Juul could be mistaken for a USB flash drive and has exploded in popularity with teens and young adults.
|
|
In office he has proved more pragmatic than expected, and his rhetoric might nowadays be mistaken for a management consultant's.
|
|
An official told NBC News that the sound of people watching the Olympics may have been mistaken for gun shots.
|
|
That means a conventional attack might be mistaken for a pre-emptive nuclear strike, which could lead to rapid escalation.
|
|
But on account of their feather colors and bizarre head shape and, in daylight they're more often mistaken for branches.
|
|
Abu Yassin's son was mistaken for a fighter and killed as he stood on the roof of the family's home.
|
|
Lesandro (pictured) was killed after he was mistaken for a Trinitario from a rival "set" the group was plotting against.
|
|
Is a simulation the kind of thing that might be, given sufficient computational powers and details, mistaken for a world?
|
|
The new Misfit Ray, announced today at CES, could easily be mistaken for a bracelet instead of an activity tracker.
|
|
This weekend in Reno, Donald Trump was ushered off the stage when a protester was mistaken for a perceived threat.
|
|
The 42-year-old producer also revealed last year that Ava is often mistaken for her at events and premieres.
|
|
Inevitably shot from above—bird's-eye-view style—these videos are unlikely to be mistaken for great works of cinema.
|
|
A tanuki, commonly mistaken for a badger or a raccoon, is actually an atypical species of dog known in Japan.
|
|
Because dehydration can often be mistaken for hunger, you might gain weight as you try to satisfy your body's needs.
|
|
When seen close up, the models resemble toys but from a long distance they might be mistaken for real vehicles.
|
|
Given so much natural extravagance, it's not surprising that the real and the unreal are sometimes mistaken for each other.
|
|
She told ABC that over her 25 years of flying for Southwest, she was often mistaken for a flight attendant.
|
|
While I have never been mistaken for a stand-up comedian, I promise that my history lesson won't be dry.
|
|
This song, commonly mistaken for an Alanis Morissette song, peaked at No. 2, and was Brooks' lone top 25 hit.
|
|
Boldness should never be mistaken for being rude and abrasive; you always want to practice being bold but never rude.
|
|
Remember Ahmed Mohamed, the 14-year-old Muslim schoolboy whose homemade clock was mistaken for a bomb, causing his arrest?
|
|
It could almost be mistaken for a family home were it not for the protesters, who arrive about 8 a.m.
|
|
That's not to say the fact that I'm mistaken for being white has completely shielded me from Islamophobia here, though.
|
|
With the sound off this could easily be mistaken for a montage of Nicolas Cage's most flamboyant mid-90s moments.
|
|
Maybe Larry is mistaken for Bernie Sanders and, after a series of tragic and increasingly improbable misunderstandings, is elected president?
|
|
But I usually wear a hoodie, and my style is pretty gender neutral, so I'm sometimes mistaken for a dude.
|
|
But these symptoms aren&apost unique to molar pregnancies and at first they can sometimes be mistaken for something else.
|
|
I take that to mean that González is not a serious designer but does not mind being mistaken for one.
|
|
You may think that's polite behavior, but it can be mistaken for having no ideas or being a lackluster employee.
|
|
As a white man, he was mistaken for being on both sides of the revolution and welcomed by no one.
|
|
While it might have been mistaken for a brownie, it was more sophisticated and powerfully flavorful — amaretti make themselves known.
|
|
A large man, he could have been mistaken for a roadie in the years he was opening for rock groups.
|
|
Trollinger In the Württemberg region of southwestern Germany, trollinger makes red wines so pale they could be mistaken for rosé.
|
|
Daniel Radcliffe says he was mistaken for a homeless person while in New York and a stranger gave him money.
|
|
Grant plays Roger Thornhill, an adman who is mistaken for an intelligence agent and finds himself running for his life.
|
|
Additionally, since thirst can be mistaken for hunger, planning to drink throughout the day can help you avoid unnecessary snacking.
|
|
Others are being criticized for their work wardrobe, and some even are mistaken for staffers instead of the lawmakers themselves.
|
|
Nor should it be mistaken for the intent to put the accused on a pedestal or to condone their actions.
|
|
Bloomberg may be a liberal who believes in big government but he's certainly not to be mistaken for a socialist.
|
|
Officials are investigating the incident including how a doll, however realistic looking, could have been mistaken for a dead infant.
|
|
Just one in five people who were infected developed symptoms, and they were usually mild and often mistaken for other illnesses.
|
|
It could have been mistaken for a prison yard if not for the string of Christmas lights and some potted plants.
|
|
Doctors in busy emergency rooms can miss an early diagnosis of sepsis, which can be mistaken for a lower grade infection.
|
|
Emoji can be easily mistaken for one another, which increases the risk to the user of following URLs intended to mislead.
|
|
The writing on some Woolworths chicken packaging was mistaken for a curse word, but turned out to be upside down numbers.
|
|
She's currently dating Robert Graham, who was on Desiree's season of The Bachelorette, and could easily be mistaken for a Hemsworth.
|
|
Then, C.J.'s older brother Calvin (Brian Vaughn Bradley Jr.) is mistaken for an armed robber and gunned down by police.
|
|
With Halloween quickly approaching, the Johnstown Police Department is warning parents that the edibles can be easily mistaken for real candy.
|
|
" The new law, Mr. Brenner wrote, was a "creepy scheme" that could be mistaken for "something out of George Orwell's '1984.
|
|
Christian Frederick Martin IV is a genial, mellow raconteur who shouldn't be mistaken for a man who doesn't know his business.
|
|
While on vacation, Stamos, 52, was mistaken for another handsome actor by a fan – and he caught it all on film.
|
|
But I was also tired of being mistaken for someone who was rich when I felt I had less than nothing.
|
|
At first glance — and first feel — Gemini 2 sneakers could easily be mistaken for any other athletic shoe on the market.
|
|
And it can mask whether antidepressants are working, because symptoms of chronic illness can be mistaken for depression — and vice versa.
|
|
Twenty percent of women also said they've been mistaken for someone at a lower professional level, compared to 10% of men.
|
|
It's one good-looking vent, although due to its placement above the stove, it could easily be mistaken for a microwave.
|
|
Just look at this weirdo:Because they're big, nocturnal, and tend to eat vermin, frogmouths are often mistaken for owls at night.
|
|
Officials said the flare of a match used to light a cigarette was mistaken for the flash of a sniper's gun.
|
|
Not to be mistaken for the similar but distinctly separate rivetheads, who arose in the late 1980s, cybergoth was alien, otherworldly.
|
|
He covered the original tattoo after moving to Oakland, where the three dots and cross were mistaken for a gang symbol.
|
|
It used to be a case of walking past somebody who looked just like you, or being mistaken for one another.
|
|
Shaun is the kind of film where a dog will be mistaken for a surgeon, then ushered into an operating theater.
|
|
Remember John Lewis, the American computer science educator who's forever being mistaken for both a congressman and a British department store?
|
|
I think the Model 3 is a sharp ride, but it could easily be mistaken for a Mazda3 that costs $21,000.
|
|
The muffuletta, made with prosciutto, capicola, shaved Parmesan, and olive salad, could easily be mistaken for an extra-spicy Italian combo.
|
|
Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt both get mistaken for Matt Damon, the pair confirmed in an interview with BBC Radio 1.
|
|
Robbie then said she recently got mistaken for her lookalike actress Emma Mackey, who stars in the Netflix series "Sex Education."
|
|
Both reports were produced by the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC), designed to be easily mistaken for the IPCC.
|
|
Joe sells his book to an internet publisher and is soon mistaken for an actual assassin, kidnapped, and dispatched to Venezuela.
|
|
But Simcott learned three of the languages in which he is mistaken for a native when he was in his twenties.
|
|
Today, the building's buzzer panel for its 85 units could be mistaken for the intercom of an apartment building in Russia.
|
|
Me talk to agent about possible second career as recording artist, because me often mistaken for gravel-voiced singer Tom Waits.
|
|
Music can cause frisson—"a sudden strong feeling of excitement or fear; a thrill"—which can sometimes be mistaken for ASMR.
|
|
The recently discovered rogue planet SIMP J01365663+0933473 was first detected in 2016, but was originally mistaken for a brown dwarf.
|
|
Of course, the line that she was mistaken for an intruder is only the official story, and it's not really believable.
|
|
Meanwhile, men who Tweeted about "positive sociality," such as having fun with family and friends, were most often mistaken for women.
|
|
Gas had built up in her innards after she had eaten small pieces of plastic mistaken for food such as jellyfish.
|
|
Separately, the lobster tasted much like coconut shrimp; the Cheddar Bay waffle could have been mistaken for a Costco Asiago bagel.
|
|
But it's low-key enough that it could almost be mistaken for a public service announcement — or an Army recruitment ad.
|
|
My office is very informal, daily jeans and a blouse is fine, but I am often mistaken for a college intern.
|
|
Polio mistaken for a shirt It was just three years ago that WHO declared the Americas to be free of measles.
|
|
J.C. Scraggly, slightly out of tune guitar picking runs through "Body Count," but it shouldn't be mistaken for fragility or diffidence.
|
|
CreditCreditNicholas Calcott The artist Genesis Belanger's sun-filled Williamsburg studio could easily be mistaken for a sort of strange, surrealist kitchen.
|
|
Harmful algae blooms, which can be blue, vibrant green, brown or red, are sometimes mistaken for paint floating on the water.
|
|
Similar shapes and colors — a brown seat cushion or a rust-colored hat, for example — can be mistaken for a basketball.
|
|
Here at the Tribe, everyone seemed to be equal in their participation; even the pastors could easily be mistaken for congregants.
|
|
The two were shot by hunters after being mistaken for deer, according to the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR).
|
|
To the untrained eye, Ms. Minegishi's creations could easily be mistaken for plastic or, at the very least, heavily lacquered wood.
|
|
Actress Michelle Williams and singer Michelle Williams look nothing alike, but that doesn't stop them from being mistaken for one another.
|
|
Science was being told that I was mistaken for a waiter at a party because I had worn a black sweater.
|
|
Federal officials have said that they are investigating the possibility that the victims were mistaken for members of a rival group.
|
|
Rock says although it can be comforting working with people who share your background, this shouldn't be mistaken for an advantage.
|
|
If catatonic symptoms were present, but not paired with schizophrenia, they might be mistaken for other conditions, like encephalopathy or coma.
|
|
A senior Revolutionary Guards commander later said on state TV Saturday that the plane had been mistaken for a cruise missile.
|
|
The Gucci show marked the runway debut of Beth, who — androgynous and lithe — could easily be mistaken for a career model.
|
|
CreditCreditIllustration by Kelsey Dake The bald eagle, a bird that lives only in North America, is sometimes mistaken for an idea.
|
|
The Onion's articles are frequently mistaken for real news — not just by ordinary readers, but by major news outlets and politicians.
|
|
While the ensemble would never be mistaken for, say, the multicultural cast of "Hamilton," it is the troupe's most diverse yet.
|
|
For example, polyamory is still commonly mistaken for polygamy, or the religious (and arguably misogynistic) practice of men marrying multiple women.
|
|
And, she was also reportedly mistaken for a clerk by Trump in one of her earliest meetings with him on Russia.
|
|
With her long fingernails, hair extensions and a preoccupation with the fashionable, she could easily be mistaken for an unremarkable teenager.
|
|
In fact, Reed's mural could be mistaken for a Benglis floor painting were it to somehow magically melt off the wall.
|
|
Lamar Odom took a stroll with a woman who could in almost every respect be mistaken for ex-wife Khloe Kardashian.
|
|
If you have redness or a rash, it could be contact dermatitis, which is often mistaken for herpes, or a yeast infection.
|
|
But in less than a week Trump has morphed into a guy who could almost be mistaken for a conventional Republican president.
|
|
U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said the coalition would investigate reports that dozens of innocent civilians mistaken for jihadist fighters were killed.
|
|
But this list shouldn't be mistaken for a complete catalog of Uber's fuck-ups—Silicon Valley only eats humble pie for optics.
|
|
The hundreds of thousands of leaked documents included a video of a shocking American airstrike on innocent Iraqis, carelessly mistaken for terrorists.
|
|
His "Dawn Buster" show (four hours from 6am) was so hot, or cool, that it was often mistaken for a Stateside station.
|
|
Ford's first autonomous car was undeniably alien, but from most angles the new version could easily be mistaken for just another car.
|
|
The Ocean Conservancy, an environmental advocacy group, ranks plastic cutlery on its "most deadly" list for marine animals when mistaken for food.
|
|
"Trainwreck" and "Compton," both Universal releases, could never be mistaken for specialty items; they're just good mainstream movies with some welcome differences.
|
|
The entire Microsoft Office Suite, including Word, Excel and PowerPoint, could easily be mistaken for the applications running on a Windows desktop.
|
|
I am reliably mistaken for a student at my various teaching jobs because I'm not a white man in a tweed jacket.
|
|
In 2016, the duo took several brief splits during which the rapper hung out with models who could be mistaken for Jenner.
|
|
Which might be why her latest look seems so dramatic — and why it's even having her mistaken for her more adventurous sibling.
|
|
It's definitely not the first time, but there's now a bull, initially mistaken for a cow, on the loose in Prospect Park.
|
|
But the shrimp's only the garnish for yet another component: a creamy gazpacho that could be mistaken for a loose Romesco sauce.
|
|
Without careful discernment and a little bit of patience, these dramatically realistic paintings may very well be mistaken for the real thing.
|
|
It's also a fickle world: One day you're being mistaken for a low-level celebrity and the next you're being cruelly ostracized.
|
|
Working in your own self-interest is mistaken for a political act, and accruing money and power becomes an unquestioned feminist goal.
|
|
In fact, the actor says that he gets mistaken for his 17-year-old daughter Ava's brother: "That has happened!" he says.
|
|
Batmanglij has been mistaken for an East Asian, a Latino, and, in the early days of Vampire Weekend, a blue-blooded Wasp.
|
|
Sometimes, keeping your head down and your eyes on the prize can be mistaken for a negative outlook or an unfriendly attitude.
|
|
But he almost didn't get the part because in a meeting with the director, his low-key manner was mistaken for uninterest.
|
|
The company has extended the screen's top protective layer, which some reviewers had mistaken for a screen protector, beyond the phone's bezel.
|
|
He will never be mistaken for a liberal jurist, but he's known as an institutionalist who wants to protect the court's reputation.
|
|
With its fluorescent lighting and standard-issue dorm-room carpeting, the suite could be mistaken for any other student club's meeting space.
|
|
Likewise, Tsaagan mangas was a Mongolian desert dweller so similar to the Velociraptor genus that at first, it was mistaken for it.
|
|
Further Seems Forever, Planes Mistaken for Stars, and The Movielife continued to shape the series' notable roster in the years to come.
|
|
" A journalist who "could almost be mistaken for a pessimist", he "can be very cynical and distrusting of what [he] comes across.
|
|
What I think is so often mistaken for that stuff is big, sincere, high-drama feeling, which the film has in abundance.
|
|
Kinsey told Miami news broadcaster WSVN that the object, which he said was a toy truck, was apparently mistaken for a handgun.
|
|
In this infamous raid by the Turkish military, 34 Kurdish smugglers from the village of Roboski were mistaken for terrorists and killed.
|
|
Put your hands up and spread your fingers to show you are not carrying anything that could be mistaken for a gun.
|
|
Ms. Saul's ceramics, which depict people, animals and plants, are whimsical and endearing, with a lightheartedness that could be mistaken for triviality.
|
|
He added, "While I have never been mistaken for a stand-up comedian, I promise that my history lesson won't be dry."
|
|
Trails can consist of little more than slightly trampled grass, easily mistaken for the paths left by wandering rivulets or grazing sheep.
|
|
So are mahogany and walnut, "but there are other less common woods that can be easily mistaken for them," he points out.
|
|
Yet just by virtue of her design eye and thrift-shopping prowess, it could easily have been mistaken for a movie set.
|
|
Yemi, on the other hand, remains a mystery for much of the novel and his quiet demeanor is often mistaken for stupidity.
|
|
Several online startups are making cool, stylish backpacks that won't be mistaken for the ones your 10-year-old niece is wearing.
|
|
A man born and raised in Canada as a Roman Catholic but who is often mistaken for a Hindu or a Muslim.
|
|
I live in New York now, and though I still say "soory" instead of "sorry," I am often mistaken for an American.
|
|
For now, the strong breeze coming off Monterey Bay on Sunday could easily have been mistaken for a collective sigh of relief.
|
|
The square design, which has apparently been mistaken for a Confederate flag, stamps the ribbon every few feet — repeating over and over.
|
|
The shop has a lounge area with a bar cart, fitting rooms and salesmen who would never be mistaken for basketball players.
|
|
The empty nihilism of "Joker" and the empty Anglo-sentimentalism of "1917," Sam Mendes's Oscar-thirsty war picture, are mistaken for profundity.
|
|
"It's sad," he said, mentioning the case of a teenager who was killed by unidentified gunmen after being mistaken for someone else.
|
|
Both groups produced dense, fractured masses of sound that could be mistaken for passages in nineteen-fifties compositions by Stockhausen or Nono.
|
|
They hide their insults by asking seemingly innocent questions and employing compliments and strained smiles that can easily be mistaken for grimaces.
|
|
On Tuesday, the F.A.A. barred American airliners from flying over Iran, citing the risk of commercial planes being mistaken for military aircraft.
|
|
A senior Revolutionary Guards commander later appeared on state TV Saturday explaining that the plane had been mistaken for a cruise missile.
|
|
Ms. Feliz said she warned her son to avoid talking with gang members because he could be mistaken for one of them.
|
|
Cynthia Stafford, a Democrat, called it a dangerous policy that could disproportionately impact students of color who might be mistaken for shooters.
|
|
Certain frames could be mistaken for photos, were it not for the audio of howling wind or dripping water or rustling trees.
|
|
" There's a famous scene in the movie, "Aliens," where a fellow Marine asks Goldstein's character, "Have you ever been mistaken for a man?
|
|
This is sometimes mistaken for rudeness but is closer to pride and a confidence that everybody, including the customers, knows how to act.
|
|
I'm greeted by cheerful orange doors, through which lies what could easily be mistaken for your local minimart or 24-hour convenience store.
|
|
But despite the looks of tiredness and the anxious parents, the departure could have been mistaken for any other day of high school.
|
|
People with alopecia are often mistaken for cancer patients, but the condition isn't life-threatening and many people with alopecia are healthy otherwise.
|
|
At least 20 pro-government Sunni tribal fighters were killed in an air strike in Iraq after being mistaken for Islamic State militants.
|
|
In fact, the income statement of a company selling these types of products could easily be mistaken for those of a software business.
|
|
It can arise when one state takes defensive actions which are mistaken for acts of aggression by another, making all sides less safe.
|
|
I try not to think about the stingers, poisons, or the liquid that—if I'm being generous—could be mistaken for raw sewage.
|
|
New work suggests that rocky planets with rings may be more common than previously thought, having been mistaken for another type of planet.
|
|
By adding a little extra spacing between each letter in the word "click", it's a lot less likely to be mistaken for "dick".
|
|
While Charmed keeps itself in the headlines with a possible reboot, Tunney says that she doesn't get mistaken for a Charmed star anymore.
|
|
The treat, which is not to be mistaken for a cookie, consists of a layer of chocolate cream sandwiched between two chocolate biscuits.
|
|
Take away the towering concrete walls separating the complex from a highway, and the prison could be mistaken for any midwestern college gymnasium.
|
|
The performance art was organized by Alison Jackson, a photographer famous for her celebrity lookalike portraits that are often mistaken for authentic photos.
|
|
Cat scratch disease often causes vague symptoms including exhaustion, joint aches, and fever and has been mistaken for chronic fatigue syndrome, says Petersen.
|
|
I grew up in the Midwest, a half-Vietnamese kid perpetually mistaken for the only other Asian kid (half-Chinese) in my grade.
|
|
Aside from an LCD display, these could easily be mistaken for watches worn by ivy league-types who wear their sweaters like capes.
|
|
Those two names in particular loom large in Ballerini's still-evolving personal mythology—and hell, she's even been mistaken for the 1989 singer.
|
|
But don't be mistaken, for the case is no mere fleeting burst of genius destined to fade with time like Herrick's famous rosebuds.
|
|
Partially freaked out, but totally focused, the band pumped out a track that could easily be mistaken for early recordings by The Stooges.
|
|
It could just as well be mistaken for a piece of morbid modern art, made from the bones and semen of unnamed donors.
|
|
As for the ongoing investigation, each cup McCrum sells dons that same logo seen in Episode 4, originally mistaken for a Starbucks logo.
|
|
And 63-year-old Lyn Slater, a professor at Fordham University, was mistaken for a model and has since become a fashion icon.
|
|
"This isn't the first time I've been mistaken for Ryan Reynolds, but it's getting out of hand," he joked in his acceptance speech.
|
|
The suspect's defense lawyer carefully explained that regional intelligence reports showed that the suspect had been mistaken for someone with a similar name.
|
|
As such, I have been mistaken for "local" in many destinations and have tended to stay off the radar and avoid unwanted interactions.
|
|
Take a look at Hollywood's interchangeable celebrities For instance, actor Michael B. Jordan has said that he often gets mistaken for Nick Cannon.
|
|
At first glance — and after further inspection — the Gemini 2 sneakers could easily be mistaken for any other athletic shoe on the market.
|
|
Laird also warns of more serious infections, such as influenza and pneumonia, which have similar symptoms and can be mistaken for a cold.
|
|
That could get you mistaken for a coxinha (fried chicken dumpling), a nickname given, inexplicably, to those calling for President Dilma Rousseff's ouster.
|
|
The directorial feature debut of the Chinese-American filmmaker Chloé Zhao, "Songs My Brothers Taught Me" could easily be mistaken for a documentary.
|
|
Bipolar patients sometimes experience delusions which can lead to a schizophrenia misdiagnosis, while the intense negative mood episodes can be mistaken for depression.
|
|
I sent my DeepSense profile to my boss and she responded: hahahahahahaI only disagree with this: could almost be mistaken for a pessimistAlmost?
|
|
It's indicative of the 43-year-old musician's polite and reserved demeanor, one that at a cursory glance could be mistaken for aloofness.
|
|
It's still unclear why the family was targeted, but their convoy of vehicles may have been mistaken for that of a rival group.
|
|
In our survey of 108 Women's World Cup players spanning 17 countries, they lamented about their muscular physiques and being mistaken for men.
|
|
Hamrah gets mistaken for Orson Welles, even though Hamrah doesn't wear a hat or a cape and, unlike Welles, is very much alive.
|
|
As fall TV enters October after a very busy September premiere week, you'd be mistaken for thinking it's stopped to catch its breath.
|
|
Wearing crisp shirts tucked into jeans, the brothers could have been mistaken for any two Irish guys from North Jersey who made good.
|
|
In some cases the harmful algae, which can be blue, vibrant green, brown or red, are mistaken for paint floating on the water.
|
|
Principled disagreement is so easily mistaken for provocation that it becomes easier, if you're not inclined to howl, to not even bother whispering.
|
|
Having somehow deviated from its charted course and entered prohibited Russian airspace, the plane may have been mistaken for an American spy plane.
|
|
Prince Harry could be mistaken for his wife&aposs bodyguard in an awkward photo of the couple&aposs first outing of the year.
|
|
At first glance, the pair could be mistaken for husband and wife, leaning against each other with ease as they shucked the nuts.
|
|
I started my career as a business journalist when I was 21, and at events I was frequently mistaken for a PR assistant.
|
|
The actress Michelle Williams and the singer Michelle Williams look nothing alike, but that doesn't stop them from being mistaken for one another.
|
|
But because of her short hair and androgynous clothing, she said she's frequently mistaken for a man — especially in locker rooms and restrooms.
|
|
"At a dinner party, Sandra had to stop him from eating a stick of butter, which he had mistaken for cheese," writes Thomas.
|
|
Oiwa's landscape is far too tranquil to be mistaken for the software's creation, but his line work warps into natural elements quite often.
|
|
Hypothyroidism — low hormone levels — in particular is often misdiagnosed, its symptoms resembling those of other diseases or mistaken for "normal" effects of aging.
|
|
Certainly I was no fashion authority, and whatever else I spun these miniature stories into, it was not to be mistaken for gold.
|
|
From ground-level, this Beverly Hills residence could be mistaken for a one-story modern mansion... ...with a very nice pool out back.
|
|
She trusts in her technical command and her engagement with art history, and she is unafraid to be mistaken for a mere observer.
|
|
Lively's prose is sharp, precise, perfectly pitched, but shrinks from flashiness in a way that has sometimes been mistaken for cozy or middlebrow.
|
|
Pedestals are designed so as not to be mistaken for cocktail tables, because guests sometimes abandon empty beer glasses next to sculptural pieces.
|
|
The foursome was mistaken for a group of Germans who&aposd infiltrated Allied lines in US uniforms and held at gunpoint for hours.
|
|
Wearing jeans and trainers, they could easily be mistaken for one of the millions of tourists that come through the city each year.
|
|
" That's not to be mistaken for ownership, however: "People ask us if they're buying the star, and we say, 'No, you're naming it.
|
|
Meanwhile, my office mate, a black man and fellow summer associate, was routinely mistaken for a copier repairman by associates and partners alike.
|
|
A once super-famous actor with age-spotted temples and sagging pecs, he now gets mistaken for Nicolas Cage or maybe Val Kilmer.
|
|
She wore her hair short because it was practical for the sport, so short that she was sometimes mistaken for a young man.
|
|
The cardinal came after, driving a car that was similar to the one used by El Chapo, and was mistaken for the druglord.
|
|
To the naked eye, it could easily be mistaken for a golden bean, a kernel of corn, or an unappealing drop of honey.
|
|
The fire commissioner told the station that they're "trying to piece everything together" to determine how the teenager could have been mistaken for dead.
|
|
In a 1994 appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman, Hunt explained there were many times when she was mistaken for being Foster.
|
|
As part of a family of Chinese migrants, he would often be mistaken for a tourist and be hit with the accompanying hiked rates.
|
|
But just as the Labo piano shouldn't be mistaken for a real musical instrument, Labo VR should not be viewed as "real" virtual reality.
|
|
Sikhs are often mistaken for Muslims in the US, and since 9/11, the community has been the subject of many hate-inspired attacks.
|
|
The invite-only program is curiously called Amazon Day, not to be mistaken for Amazon's yearly Prime Day shopping event, as spotted by CNET.
|
|
On the hunt for food, Claire gets mistaken for one of the ladies of the house, and ends up having a very raunchy breakfast.
|
|
Theris, her scarred and bug-bitten body by then tanned and dirtied by her time outside, was initially mistaken for a deer, NBC reports.
|
|
I wonder if, with my overzealous application of oil-absorbing starches, I'm just one poorly-aimed spritz away from being mistaken for James Madison.
|
|
In one episode of the series, he's actually mistaken for a baby and wrapped in a diaper, and he appears to enjoy being infantilized.
|
|
Van Hove's approach is to set the play in a no-place, a symbolic theatrical space that could not be mistaken for naturalistic reality.
|
|
These laws are needed, as often, victims who are forced to commit a crime are mistaken for criminals by law enforcement and judicial officials.
|
|
This should not be mistaken for a matter of technique; rather, it was a manner of taking optical control of the substance in painting.
|
|
Now you have choices, thanks to NFL stud defensive end Bryan Braman -- who says he gets mistaken for the jacked up actor EVERY DAY!
|
|
With a cursory glance, these images could easily be mistaken for snapshots of domestic scenes, portraits of Leigh's friends, and David LaChapelle-style tableaus.
|
|
Yet in projects such as IMAGINARY COUPLES, the ongoing movement for gay equality has been mistaken for the "love wins" euphoria of marriage equality.
|
|
"It can't be mistaken for any local fish," said Nicholas Ta, who has been diving in the Monterey area almost daily for five years.
|
|
So long as it is not mistaken for the kind of broader strategy that the region requires, the FC-G5S is worth a shot.
|
|
Cocchi said it was typical of its day: a lot of high-angle, center-court shots that wouldn't be mistaken for a modern broadcast.
|
|
"You look at the insulation and the seat backs, the seat cushions can easily be mistaken for body parts and vice versa," Soucie said.
|
|
The upcoming Justice League movie looks very bad, based on its new trailer – in fact, it could be mistaken for its own parody film.
|
|
The entire office could easily be mistaken for a giant kindergarten classroom, a feeling that's only amplified by Melissa Bernstein's serious kindergarten teacher vibes.
|
|
Participants were invited to sculpt various objects that had been mistaken for guns, including a bible, a bag of Skittles, and a pill bottle.
|
|
Confirming their identity was important because the consequences of introducing a new species mistaken for an old one to Lord Howe Island were unpredictable.
|
|
Our reporters went to the village where one of the victims, a 65-year-old grandmother, was mistaken for a "child lifter" and killed.
|
|
Ethnically speaking, they are quite difficult to place; over the years they have been mistaken for Latino, Iranian, Turkish, Pakistani, half-Korean, half-Japanese.
|
|
AMSTERDAM — When Friedrich Nietzsche turned his pen on his onetime friend, Richard Wagner, his overarching critique was that grandeur shouldn't be mistaken for depth.
|
|
He says he has visited them to find rotting corpses and residents terrified that their young men will be mistaken for fighters and killed.
|
|
Instead, Trump touted American exceptionalism and his preference for unilateral action in what many in the crowd may have mistaken for a campaign speech.
|
|
Decorated with mahogany flower garlands, the sky-blue train parked at the sleepy station in Jalore could be mistaken for a new passenger train.
|
|
The rooms inside these shipping containers might easily be mistaken for those inside any of the timber-framed homes in the hillside country here.
|
|
"Absence of evidence shouldn't be mistaken for evidence of absence," said Susan Greenhalgh, vice president of policy and programs for National Election Defense Coalition.
|
|
The former officer said she went to the wrong apartment, which she had mistaken for her own, and believed Botham Jean was an intruder.
|
|
My eye sees the XE as handsome, though it can be mistaken for any number of brands without the signature open-mouth Jaguar grille.
|
|
Then she invites him on a tour of the countryside, during which he is mistaken for her husband — and they keep up the pretense.
|
|
In February, an officer who killed a 21-year-old black man he had mistaken for a gunman was ultimately not taken to trial.
|
|
They have separate encounters with this shadowy figure (who is, at one point, mistaken for a bull), and each sees something different in him.
|
|
A 1988 Chicago Tribune article noted that the three companies were in such a similar business that they were often mistaken for one another.
|
|
Though some tracks may be somewhat inspired by events coming out of the U.S., it's not to be mistaken for a de facto political record.
|
|
By the following summer, when I was mistaken for a pregnant woman on the subway, concern for my own mental health went out the window.
|
|
"I love being mistaken for a man, because just for a few moments, life gets a hell of a lot easier," she says in Nanette.
|
|
And iFixit did the unthinkable, pealing back the protective display, which has been mistaken for the user-replaceable adhesive plastic Samsung's other devices ship with.
|
|
This condition can cause a bunch of symptoms that could be mistaken for other problems, including anxiety, irritability, abnormal periods, increased sweating, tremors, and more.
|
|
This is true, but it should not be mistaken for the kind of active stabilization you'll get from far more expensive holders like DJI's OZMO.
|
|
The gaming industry is, frankly, paralyzed by fear of its most vocal and angry customers who are routinely mistaken for the entire population of players.
|
|
He believes Tyjuan was mistaken for a gang member when he was killed in a drive-by shooting just a few blocks from his home.
|
|
But no matter how much shapewear improves the lines of the clothes, they will never be mistaken for corsets or knickers or other thrilling Victoriana.
|
|
He and his friends used to joke about being mistaken for terrorists, Arman tells me over the phone from New York, where he now lives.
|
|
But when she searched for pictures of herself the next morning, she found that she had been mistaken for another Black woman with curly hair.
|
|
False alerts typically have occurred when a large quake elsewhere in the world is detected by a sensor and is mistaken for a local earthquake.
|
|
The Guyanese artist's bright works on paper could at first be mistaken for simple pop art, until its subjects and backgrounds are seen in full.
|
|
But just as the Labo piano shouldn't be mistaken for a real musical instrument, Labo VR ought not be viewed as a real virtual reality.
|
|
In the interview, Blandino was asked how he came up with the idea to make makeup that, with one whiff, can be mistaken for dessert.
|
|
Trying to improve his self-image, Evan writes himself a letter that is mistaken for a classmate's suicide note — and rides that error to popularity.
|
|
His public mathematics lectures could easily be mistaken for magic shows, but there's no sleight of hand, no hidden compartments, no trick deck of cards.
|
|
"The flag was so clearly made of dildos that I never thought it could be mistaken for an actual ISIS flag," Coombs told The Guardian.
|
|
Some days, our left eye will look like it's melting off, while the right could be mistaken for the work of Kat Von D herself.
|
|
Auburn is a picturesque campus that could be mistaken for a northeastern liberal arts school, the main difference being the conservative bent of Auburn's students.
|
|
Preventing the risk of throat gonorrhea is difficult because kissing is so common and symptoms can be hard to detect or mistaken for other conditions.
|
|
Emily Willingham: One of the most confusing things is that screening tests, like cell-free DNA sampling, are mistaken for being diagnostic when they're not.
|
|
In May's maiden speech to the House of Commons, she joked about being mistaken for an incoming Labour M.P. simply because she was a woman.
|
|
With garish lions standing guard at the gate and animal scenes painted on the front wall, it could easily be mistaken for a tourist company.
|
|
"Remember: Please stay close to the windows, not the benches," says the blonde line leader, who can easily be mistaken for a runway model herself.
|
|
Because Sikhs are sometimes mistaken for Muslims, an offender may have intended to commit a hate crime against a Muslim but instead attacked a Sikh.
|
|
The egregious mixup recalled last year's mistaken identification of Gina Rodriguez as America Ferrera, or the party where Mindy Kaling was mistaken for Malala Yousafzai.
|
|
Sometimes, hormone fluctuations cause light bleeding, which can be mistaken for a period, leading the mother to think they are having a regular menstrual cycle.
|
|
Often mistaken for an outright remake, this Ghostbusters is an entirely separate story from the original, albeit with the same goal — to kick phantom butt.
|
|
And growing up in this country, the accouterments that signify a kind of florid, overly enthusiastic preparedness for war frequently gets mistaken for actual strength.
|
|
Not to be mistaken for a spaghetti-legged member of Daft Punk, NASA's Robonaut 21 was actually the first humanoid robot ever sent to space.
|
|
Part of what makes ovarian cancer so deadly is that the symptoms can easily be mistaken for other health issues that women consider fairly normal.
|
|
In his youthful explorations, he studied a glacial pothole by a busy roadside that historians had long mistaken for a well dug by American Indians.
|
|
Sikhs are often mistaken for Muslims, and various accounts have suggested an increase in anti-Sikh hate crimes in the United States since the Sept.
|
|
Put a Bible in her hand and Phil Collins on the jukebox, and she could easily be mistaken for her TV alter ego, Paige Jennings.
|
|
But in between those deep dives, they often hang around the surface, making them susceptible to ingesting floating debris that might be mistaken for food.
|
|
The indictment said the detective wore a shirt to the protest that revealed his waistband so he would not be mistaken for carrying a weapon.
|
|
But overall, the evening could have been mistaken for a grimly satirical parody of Hollywood awards ceremonies at their navel-gazing and backward-looking worst.
|
|
Furthermore, the symptoms of a silent heart attack can easily be mistaken for something else, such as indigestion, a challenging workout, or even a toothache.
|
|
Yet the arrangements featured hand-played, natural sounds and could be mistaken for more conventional singer-songwriter fare, though with deeply cryptic, self-referential lyrics.
|
|
Another angle: On Tuesday, the Federal Aviation Administration told American airlines not to fly over Iran, in case their jets were mistaken for military aircraft.
|
|
But those examples were team specific and localized, while the potential for being mistaken for MAGA appears to have no regional or even international boundaries.
|
|
"What you're arguing then is the FBI and the Justice Department are mistaken for taking the president literally, because they don't speak 'Americanese,'" Cooper said.
|
|
The C.E.O. of Uber is stepping down from the president's economic advisory council, saying he did not want his participation to be mistaken for support.
|
|
This John Cassavetes feature from 231 is, for better and worse, the least diluted example of his discursive style, which is often mistaken for improvisation.
|
|
For an amateur, Nels is awfully good at killing, and he takes to it with a grim determination that could easily be mistaken for enthusiasm.
|
|
So they designed an e-cigarette that could easily be mistaken for a USB flash drive and can fit in the palm of the hand.
|
|
Once there, she is mistaken for the princess' tutor and takes advantage of the opportunity by going undercover to learn more about the royal family.
|
|
So they designed an e-cigarette that could easily be mistaken for a USB flash drive — and can fit in the palm of the hand.
|
|
In many cases, however, symptoms never develop at all, especially in women, or they're so mild that they're mistaken for a bladder or vaginal infection.
|
|
It's not that they're mistaken for believing players drafted in the first round are, on average, better than players drafted in the third or fourth round.
|
|
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK FOR MORE FOX TRAVEL NEWS Ball pythons are often mistaken for Burmese pythons, which are usually 6 to 9 feet in length.
|
|
The uncanny valley teems with creepy humanoids—machines not quite perfect enough to be mistaken for people, but not quite comically robotic enough to be endearing.
|
|
According to Lu, she's kept her hair short since she was young, and frequently got mistaken for a boy when going into women's restrooms growing up.
|
|
AKM-GSI Not everyone could pull off a silk and lace dress that could easily be mistaken for a nightgown, but Amal Clooney is not everyone.
|
|
At all times Charles seemed like a man uncomfortable with celebrity and could never be mistaken for one who was in love with the fight game.
|
|
The game reaches its climax when the prison-team catcher calls for a pitch with a piece of the anatomy that's initially mistaken for a thumb.
|
|
Simon Cowell reenacted that scene in reverse during an X-Factor episode when his big toe was mistaken for, how shall we say it, his junk.
|
|
Turns out, there are downsides to being mistaken for a celebrity: "I've had people take photos of me without my permission, which is unnerving," said Cadman.
|
|
"Stopped our show tonight due to a motorcycle backfire that was mistaken for a bomb or a shooting," Mockingbird cast member Gideon Glick wrote on Twitter.
|
|
But both men generally fit into the definition of a liberal Democrat (Biden's Senate record won't be mistaken for that of Joe Lieberman any time soon).
|
|
Busy Philipps, known for her roles in Freaks and Geeks, Dawson's Creek and White Chicks, was somehow mistaken for White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
|
|
Madison (Emma Roberts) is also dead, but she's in hell — which, for the former actress, means working a retail job and getting mistaken for Lindsay Lohan.
|
|
"My daughter gets embarrassed sometimes by the fact that I do look so young and I get mistaken for her brother sometimes," he told the host.
|
|
Stephanie Mincone The 22018-year-old dancer was first thrust into the spotlight when she was mistaken for Sia's muse Maddie Ziegler at Coachella in 22.
|
|
These symptoms can be easily mistaken for a mild case of dengue, a fever that infected 1.6 million Brazilians last year and killed more than 800.
|
|
Deadly airstrikes last fall hitting a hospital in Kunduz that U.S. authorities had mistaken for a Taliban site, according to officials in President Barack Obama's administration.
|
|
From being mistaken for a janitor to spending long periods of time away from her children, Johnson had to endure challenges unfamiliar to her male counterparts.
|
|
At first glance, this could be mistaken for a conservative shift, a retreat into otherworldly rectitude within an art form known for its realism and insolence.
|
|
There are a few moments in which "the film might be mistaken for a horror movie about an alien invasion," Stephen Holden wrote in The Times.
|
|
Police video footage of the confrontation released three days later showed Clark holding a cell phone that police said the officers had mistaken for a firearm.
|
|
But I would never be mistaken for a native speaker, could never let loose a torrent of Spanish words like the heroine of an Almodóvar movie.
|
|
First he cracks open the hard shell, an oven-baked carapace of salt, vegetable ash and egg whites that could be mistaken for a dinosaur egg.
|
|
A Russian reconnaissance plane was shot down over the Mediterranean Sea on Monday when it was mistaken for an Israeli warplane by Russia's own ally, Syria.
|
|
When Bullock is mistaken for the girlfriend of a comatose Peter Gallagher, his family (Pullman plays the brother) welcomes her into their home for the holidays.
|
|
If not for the occasional human figure, the naval city south of Tokyo could be mistaken for a ghost town of old signs and shuttered storefronts.
|
|
Put on some headphones, crank "My, My, My," and you could be mistaken for thinking that the Ramones released an album on Homestead Records circa 1986.
|
|
An aspiring artist and writer, he also wears his hair long, but with his delicate features and refined air, he is often mistaken for a girl.
|
|
Therapy pets are easily mistaken for regular pets, but there's one key difference: Therapy pets are permitted to travel on planes with their owners, for free.
|
|
What I am saying should not be mistaken for cultural cringe, another Australian disease in which we think ourselves lesser than the grander cultures of elsewhere.
|
|
With its baby blue interior, medical posters on the wall and a cabinet overflowing with bandages, Mr. Otieno's stall could be mistaken for a health clinic.
|
|
Josh Sperling, a third-generation American artist, does both sculptures and sculptural paintings; with their squiggles and candy colors, they could be mistaken for oversize desserts.
|
|
Three days later, I.R.A. operatives seized two nonuniformed British Army corporals mistaken for loyalist gunmen at the funeral of one of those killed in Milltown Cemetery.
|
|
Newly public web conferencing firm Zoom Video (ZM) and Zoom Technologies (ZOOM), which is a thinly traded Chinese wireless company, are often mistaken for one another.
|
|
Social media users speculated that Lesandro had been mistaken for another teenager who shared video of himself having sex with one of the suspects' female relatives.
|
|
This kind of greed should not be mistaken for bravery, not while the country and its most vulnerable people continue to be degraded by this administration.
|
|
And we loved the new, exciting music; in Italy, a rock star like Alice Cooper would have been arrested or mistaken for an alien — possibly both.
|
|
And when Ms. Haley touchingly reappears as a girl mistaken for a geisha by British sailors, it suggests a connection that a plusher production would miss.
|
|
The Night Market is thought to be "the continent's largest Asian night market," which at quick glance can easily be mistaken for Singapore's open-air centers.
|
|
Its anti-hero is Gordon Frohman: a hapless, amoral everyman who keeps getting accidentally mistaken for the scientist who might save humanity from the alien Combine.
|
|
"Decency and honor," he said immediately, suggesting that his stylistic contrast to "screaming" opponents, Mr. Sanders and Senator Elizabeth Warren, should not be mistaken for indifference.
|
|
Science was being told that I had never once been to class despite attending every session and office hour because I was mistaken for someone else.
|
|
The two had never been mistaken for rivals before, had not met in the playoffs since 219, and yet there was certifiable bad blood between them.
|
|
In some cases, Cincotta's behavior was initially mistaken for rough yet innocent play, but became cause for concern as it grew violent or incessant despite complaints.
|
|
He spends his days here, creating portraits from charcoal that are so real they could be mistaken for actual pictures -- and he's not the only one.
|
|
In an interview with BBC Radio 1&aposs Ali Plumb, Robbie admitted that she was mistaken for the "Sex Education" star at The Apple Pan diner.
|
|
Oumuamua was mistaken for an asteroid at first because it had no cometary cloud of gas and dust around it, at least that could be seen.
|
|
That letter "O" was later mistaken for the number "0" and Dugas eventually became known as "Patient Zero," meaning the first patient infected in an epidemic.
|
|
When you have a show with your name in the title, you would think you'd never have to worry about being mistaken for a mere mortal again.
|
|
Even if you have naturally funny participants, if you lean too heavily into comedy, it could cross into ridicule, or be mistaken for a Christopher Guest mockumentary.
|
|
He told CBS that he wore an Army uniform without his name or rank on it so he would not be mistaken for an active-duty soldier.
|
|
While these outlets are a locus for vast amounts of information exchange, they should not be mistaken for a true public square subject to the First Amendment.
|
|
In June, she was hit with 83 charges related to sending packages filled with baking soda that could be mistaken for anthrax and multiple false bomb threats.
|
|
Because this spider has large fangs it bares as a defense mechanism, it is commonly mistaken for the brown recluse spider in the U.S., the article states.
|
|
The Mindy Project star joked in a recent appearance on Late Night with Seth Meyers that she was being mistaken for her co-star Sandra Bullock's assistant.
|
|
Also, Abramowitz said a shocking number of pictures featured other people who could easily be mistaken for a significant other and that was a big turn off.
|
|
Dear Amy: Another anecdote about an older father being mistaken for a grandfather: My father was 57 when the youngest of my parents' 10 children was born.
|
|
A gold and ice blue Linton tweed bomber jacket was worn with a dramatic fox fur-lined hood that could almost be mistaken for a blow-dry.
|
|
"My daughter gets embarrassed sometimes by the fact that I do look so young and I get mistaken for her brother sometimes, which repulses her!" she said.
|
|
The voice can't be mistaken for a human, but it does incorporate stresses into sentences in the same way you'd expect from a TV or radio newscaster.
|
|
The War of the Worlds (1953)Lenticular clouds like this one are often mistaken for UFOs owing to their lens-like shape and smooth saucer-like appearance.
|
|
With Facebook's announcing its Libra cryptocurrency, scammers have flocked to purchase domains that could easily be mistaken for legitimate Libra sites, say threat intelligence group Digital Shadows.
|
|
He could be mistaken for a jovial, portly uncle at a family gathering: he has plenty of warmth and charm to go with his $3bn in assets.
|
|
And while being mistaken for another celebrity might be frustrating for some celebrities, Sudeikis has learned to embrace his Hollywood doppelganger and laugh off the mix-ups.
|
|
And every time an attack has been carried out by an Islamic extremist, Sikhs -- mistaken for Muslims because of their turbans and beards -- have borne the backlash.
|
|
He, of course, is frequently mistaken for Trump senior adviser Stephen Miller, who you may recognize as the wormy doofus who is astoundingly bad at press briefings.
|
|
What can I, a schmuck whose only other claim to fame is occasionally being mistaken for a more hunched Jack Penate (#indieamnsety), possibly offer Toronto's favored son?
|
|
They never appear to remain perched for long and from a distance could easily be mistaken for bats due to their flight patterns and dark grey color.
|
|
Authorities dismissed accounts that law officers fired more than 100 rounds of bullets, suggesting that the flash-bang grenades and projectiles may have been mistaken for gunfire.
|
|
But before he left the building, Harrison couldn't help to crack a joke about the bald-headed, black Palmetto State politician that Harrison sometimes gets mistaken for.
|
|
Because Umm Saleh's husband was mistaken for an ISIS fighter, she is now perceived by camp administrators and guards as the female head of an ISIS family.
|
|
She went on to elaborate that there's little chance of the Balenciaga bag being mistaken for the sampheng and vice versa because the materials are obviously different.
|
|
The DEEPFAKES Accountability Act aims to protect our democracy and the American people from the coercive and vindictive content that can easily be mistaken for the truth.
|
|
There's no satisfaction in his voice, still less a spark of fun, and what the two of them are doing should not be mistaken for a game.
|
|
Today, above-ground nuclear testing is mostly banned worldwide, since it can spread radioactive fallout, mess with electronics, be mistaken for an act of war, and more.
|
|
Another technology professional in the Bay Area who is also named Justin Keller became the object of midsdirected Twitter outrage he was mistaken for Keller the blogger.
|
|
With its entirely clear case, the $57,900 behemoth might be mistaken for a Casio G-Shock, except that it is tooled from a solid block of sapphire.
|
|
In the pilot, George is mistaken for the school's valet attendant, and it's one of the many jokes about how Latinos are denigrated and marginalized in America.
|
|
They purposefully avoid any Democratic or Republican imagery, but also stick to a polished and American style that could ensure the clips aren't mistaken for Russian propaganda.
|
|
There would be no fabulous guest stars ("I don't picture Cher showing up," Mr. Suarez said with a deadpan) and the kids wouldn't be mistaken for professionals.
|
|
In November, three police officers were found guilty of murdering a teenager who was mistaken for a drug pusher, the first such convictions in the antidrug campaign.
|
|
Chang'e-4 is the first spacecraft ever to land on the far side of the Moon, which is commonly mistaken for the "dark" side of the Moon.
|
|
Sometimes these papers are taken online altogether, where with their minimized resources they can be mistaken for URL place holders or the output of Romanian troll farms.
|
|
Meghan, the daughter of a white man and a black woman, grew up in a mostly white neighborhood, where her mother was sometimes mistaken for her nanny.
|
|
Dozens of civilians have died off the coast since the Saudi-led offensive began in 2015, many of them fishermen possibly mistaken for rebel smugglers or spotters.
|
|
Ms. Osakue said she was teased through childhood, called a "prostitute or monkey" and often mistaken for an immigrant — until she responded in her flawless, native tongue.
|
|
In other words, the map is an "outlier" — so far outside the ordinary run of things that it can't be mistaken for a map without partisan purpose.
|
|
They choose from several options for their giveaways, waiting from series to series to pick which color to accentuate, so they cannot be mistaken for their opponent.
|
|
After five days, they rested at a partisan-controlled town called Berat, where they were cheered, mistaken for the vanguard of an Allied invasion to liberate Albania.
|
|
On his way home, he is arrested at the Belgian border, mistaken for a Mendelssohn cousin called Arnold, who is on the run for theft and fraud.
|
|
So, it's no surprise the internet began poking fun at the situation and even listing other black actresses she could get mistaken for in the future. pic.twitter.
|
|
In an effort to improve his self-image, Evan writes himself a letter that is mistaken for a classmate's suicide note and rides that error to popularity.
|
|
A South Carolina man and his daughter were killed after they were mistaken for deer and were shot during a New Year's Day hunt, the authorities said.
|
|
On Tuesday, hours before the crash, the F.A.A. barred American airliners from flying over Iran, citing a risk that commercial planes would be mistaken for military aircraft.
|
|
A big claim associated with Neon is that these avatars can be mistaken for real humans — but that would be a huge leap forward over current technology.
|
|
Steck, who often ran up difficult routes in little more than tights and a headband, could easily have been mistaken for a distance runner or Nordic skier.
|
|
They've arrived at an office space that could easily be mistaken for a cheerful elementary school classroom, with its bright primary colors and cubbies along the wall.
|
|
Rotten Tomatoes score: 95%Summary: In the dramatic thriller "Red Rock West," wandering Texan Michael Williams (Cage) is mistaken for a professional hitman by a tavern owner.
|
|
The shooting has drawn comparisons to the police shooting of Tamir Rice, a 2009-year-old black boy whose toy gun was also mistaken for a real firearm.
|
|
The entire scene could have been mistaken for an updated episode of "The Twilight Zone," because it shamefully distorted Trump's actual relationship with the larger African-American community.
|
|
If you have ever been subjected to those vaguely racist vibes of being mistaken for someone else of a similar race, these girls know exactly how you feel.
|
|
Jones then told staff at the Midwest Innocence Project and the University of Kansas School of Law that he was often mistaken for the man he'd never met.
|
|
Flea-borne typhus symptoms are similar to those from the flu and other viruses — and because typhus is relatively uncommon, it can be easily mistaken for another illness.
|
|
A man who claimed that he was stabbed after being mistaken for a neo-Nazi now admits that he made the whole story up after accidentally stabbing himself.
|
|
A mass panic interrupted a performance of Hamilton at the Orpheum Theatre in San Francisco on Friday night, after a medical emergency was mistaken for an active shooter.
|
|
Denis Villeneuve's sequel to 1982's Blade Runner and HBO's series adaptation of the 1973 movie Westworld are both chilly in a way that gets mistaken for cerebral.
|
|
Back in the hospital, Ms Prodger remembers other uncertainties: being mistaken for a boy in a girls' toilet, for example, or her girlfriend being taken for her daughter.
|
|
And while some fans will no doubt decry a sense of sameness, unlike, say, certain HTC phones, the handset won't be mistaken for an iPhone any time soon.
|
|
Because he's obviously American, she thinks there's a very strong chance that she'll be mistaken for a sex worker and doesn't want to be embarrassed in her hometown.
|
|
Often mistaken for acne and other skin conditions, the flareups can be triggered by what seems like just about anything, from stress to cold weather to spicy food.
|
|
A high school student's Darth Vader suit -- in honor of Star Wars Day -- was mistaken for a bulletproof vest, and caused an evacuation and police response in Wisconsin.
|
|
The victims, the investigations found, included people suspected of committing crimes or using drugs, street children and, in some cases, people who had been mistaken for someone else.
|
|
Cramer said the downgrade was thoughtful in the sense that it tried to anticipate a letdown after the release of the next iPhone, but mistaken for several reasons.
|
|
Kerr underlines the odd symbiosis between his two good cops when Kaspel dies with his illusions intact, mistaken for Gunther—and Gunther, grieving, exacts some measure of revenge.
|
|
Berlin's Schönefeld Airport was partially closed Wednesday after various sex toys were spotted on an X-ray machine by security personnel and mistaken for parts of a bomb.
|
|
"Re-Hash" could easily be mistaken for a Blur song, the one project that Albarn was trying to move away from when he debuted Gorillaz to the world.
|
|
And since Burning Man is about gifting art and experiences, the effort one puts in can easily be mistaken for or used as satisfying procrastination for real work.
|
|
It's pretty easy to be mistaken for someone else on Twitter, but we certainly don't envy those who bear the wrath of angry Australians, Jedi-identifying or otherwise.
|
|
They theorized that diplomats were being mistaken for intelligence officers, possibly because they were living in residences previously occupied by spies, or by diplomats who worked with dissidents.
|
|
He just sat there and took it, waiting, unless I was mistaken, for it all to be over, for the relentless torment that was his life to cease.
|
|
About the size of a mouse and found in nearly all regions of the world, shrews are often mistaken for rodents, but are more closely related to moles.
|
|
In context, it's a terrifying reminder of how an all-too-human, anger-filled public figure, with access to a worldwide stage, can be mistaken for a god.
|
|
Mistaken for a Turkish onion, they were tasted, found underwhelming and dumped as rubbish, then rescued by someone who spotted flowers emerging from the rubbish heap in spring.
|
|
Although three police officers were found guilty last year of the murder of a teenager mistaken for a drug dealer, rights groups say the killing spree has continued.
|
|
Terry Brazier, aged 70, went into Leicester Royal Infirmary for a bladder procedure known as a cystoscopy but was mistaken for another patient by hospital staff and circumcised.
|
|
Based on trailers and the durable, slightly stale charm of its stars, "The House" might be mistaken for a genial, silly movie about nice people making questionable decisions.
|
|
Privacy defenses can sometimes break legitimate website functionality; comments that load from a third-party hosting service, for example, could be mistaken for a sketchy targeted ad module.
|
|
Beyond that, the Guímaro had a sort of smokiness to it, which could be mistaken for barrel aging, except that none of these wines spent time in wood.
|
|
But Jane Kleeb, a leader of the pipeline opposition, said the more muted tactics in Nebraska should not be mistaken for a lack of organization or tepid sentiments.
|
|
A military statement carried by state media said the plane was mistaken for a "hostile target" after it turned toward a "sensitive military center" of the Revolutionary Guard.
|
|
At one checkpoint, government soldiers tried to grab the young Spanish photographer I was working with, who is easily mistaken for a Syrian; they wanted to recruit him.
|
|
" Churchmuch, who travels about a dozen times a year on business, acknowledges that her whiteness "affords [her] privilege around harassment, [including] not being mistaken for a hotel employee.
|
|
The glass from Mr. Graham's windows appeared to have vaporized, leaving only a few curved pieces that could have been mistaken for sea glass collected from the beach.
|
|
Part performance space, part treasure trove of memorabilia, this modest shop could be mistaken for an old living room, with dust blanketing the used hardcovers lining the shelves.
|
|
The white S.U.V. that the employee and her husband were driving in was mistaken for the vehicle of a gang leader whose killing was ordered by a rival.
|
|
The development comes several weeks after a University of South Carolina student was killed after getting into a car she had mistaken for the Uber ride she hailed.
|
|
The Metropolitan Detention Center, or the M.D.C., is a high-rise building in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, that, at a passing glance, might be mistaken for a storage center.
|
|
Women are also far more likely to be convicted of crimes that never occurred―that is, accidents or misfortunes mistaken for crimes, like suicides judged to be homicides.
|
|
Chris Young, the assistant pitching coach, is mistaken for a retired pitcher and an outfielder on the Los Angeles Angels, all three of whom have the same name.
|
|
They finally turned down the music, and the officers took the whole thing in "good humor," since there are probably worse things than being mistaken for hot cops.
|
|
The heavy, exhuming pattern of his breathing could be mistaken for an athlete, perhaps in the moment when a race has been completed and physical restoration is necessary.
|
|
"It's not that uncommon that my players are mistaken for boys, and they shrug it off casually because they are rockstars!" the girls' coach, Molly Duffy, wrote on Facebook.
|
|
As Phillippe explained during an appearance on The Late Late Show this week, his 17-year-old daughter Ava also objects to being mistaken for her famous father's sibling.
|
|
Named Bertie, the albino peacock has been mistaken for a ghost while he&aposs looking for a little romance in Handcross (considered part of Slaugham for the 2011 Census).
|
|
Johnson would never be mistaken for a nice man or even a decent one, but his legendary ability to intimidate others makes him the Tony Soprano of this list.
|
|
To ease the jarring pain of driving through potholes that could be mistaken for craters, Ford's new Fusion V6 Sport sedan now offers a computer-controlled shock absorber system.
|
|
One feature, he says, is that the chip manages its memory in a way that ensures data cannot be mistaken for instructions, thus defanging an entire category of vulnerabilities.
|
|
The joke originated back in December 2016, when a Tumblr user photoshopped the film into Netflix's LGBT movies category (the image, btw, is often mistaken for a real screenshot).
|
|
The privilege of looking a certain way made my path much smoother than if I had darker skin: I have never been mistaken for the custodial staff at work.
|
|
"This isn't the first time I've been mistaken for Ryan Reynolds, but it's getting out of hand," Gosling quipped at the microphone, referring to Reynolds' competing nomination for Deadpool.
|
|
The Surface Earbuds, unveiled during Microsoft's big product event in New York, could easily be mistaken for gauges, or edgy ear piercings that people slowly acclimate their ears to.
|
|
Generating speech from a piece of text is a common and important task undertaken by computers, but it's pretty rare that the result could be mistaken for ordinary speech.
|
|
Joi, though, would never be mistaken for human – she's more akin to Samantha in Her, even if she occasionally gets to appear in the "real" world as a hologram.
|
|
For example, being mistaken for custodial or administrative staff—which, horrifyingly, happened to almost half of the black and Latina women in STEM surveyed by the Harvard Business Review.
|
|
Given the show's preoccupation with the idea that reality and simulation can be easily mistaken for one another, it was obvious that The Cradle was no mere passing reference.
|
|
Mr. Robot would never be mistaken for a light-hearted show—even when it's doing a parody of a sitcom—but Darlene's arc in season two was especially dark.
|
|
Out of the many clouds that help regulate the Earth's climate, the Stratocumulus, those low-lying, grayish-white clouds that are often mistaken for rain clouds, are especially significant.
|
|
There weren't many women like me hanging around the area, and on several occasions, I had been mistaken for a spy, either for the United States or South Korea.
|
|
As well as discounting the garbage dump theory, that report also dismissed the government's claim that the students were targeted because they were mistaken for a rival drug cartel.
|
|
His wild swings of opinion and mood can be mistaken for authenticity and disinhibition; or perhaps they simply embody the blurry line between keeping it real and being erratic.
|
|
So, just what in the hell could compel a seemingly lucid human to explore an avenue of expression that could easily be mistaken for a Klaus Kinski fever dream?
|
|
"Not only do they look alike, but they dress alike, hang out together and say they are always getting mistaken for sisters!" a blog on the ITV site says.
|
|
The works in Dawe's Plexus series use scores of miles of embroidery thread to build sculptural rainbows that from a distance can easily be mistaken for the real thing.
|
|
A man named Mark Horton from Watford, England, tweeted that he had received more than 200,000 mentions and online abuse after being mistaken for the Australian swimmer on Twitter.
|
|
Firearms can also be disabled or, in some cases, replaced with a decoy, although that raises the risk of them being mistaken for a real weapon in an emergency.
|
|
I've been mistaken for everyone from Hiro Nakamura to roughly half of the Asian men in New York publishing; a part of me, too, hoped this might be true.
|
|
Police initially told the Bee that Clark approached the officers while holding an "object," which at first they said was a "tool bar" they had mistaken for a gun.
|
|
It's rare to find a tapas bar with the look and feel of a sushi joint, or a sceney boîte that could be mistaken for a family-friendly cafe.
|
|
Or was it, as some critics argued, mistaken for a fictional think piece about "our political moment," shared more as an expression of political membership than of genuine appreciation?
|
|
As we rode the elevator back down, there was a quiet satisfaction in Shang's manner: being mistaken for a lawyer was another exotic adventure to add to the list.
|
|
The real-life Crawford's greatest performances have often been mistaken for camp, and Dunaway's own deeply empathetic performance here—miraculously channelling Crawford's manner and power—suffered the same fate.
|
|
Kids who "act out" are often labeled defiant or aggressive, while those who keep to themselves — anxiety specialists call them "silent sufferers" — are overlooked or mistaken for being shy.
|
|
She could have been mistaken for just another white-haired lady from the neighborhood were it not for the Secret Service agent in a suit and sunglasses close behind.
|
|
Many of the best meals I've had in the Northern Rivers could almost be mistaken for spa food, if not for the focus on bold flavor and intense pleasure.
|
|
For a while anything that could be mistaken for "Red-baiting," in the United Kingdom at least, was considered bad form, like kicking a man when he was down.
|
|
And that's where things get more tricky, because Russia is clearly engaging in its own development of next-generation weapons that could easily be mistaken for an arms race.
|
|
That is ostensibly one of the reasons Trump has elevated Israel's Democratic critics, particularly Omar and Tlaib, hoping their views will be mistaken for the entire Democratic party's views.
|
|
The streets of Polish cities are lined with post-World War II buildings whose decorated columns and facades could easily be mistaken for survivors from an older, prewar time.
|
|
The Lobby restaurant, which should not be mistaken for, well, a typical lobby restaurant has striking 20-foot floor-to-ceiling windows and features all-day contemporary American cuisine.
|
|
The C.D.C. is urging the public to get flu shots, to help reduce the number of people seeking treatment for symptoms that might be mistaken for the new coronavirus.
|
|
Dominance in a market, it says, should not be mistaken for a lack of competition: As successful as Facebook is, there's little stopping other companies from doing things better.
|
|
This new series could at first be mistaken for another addition to the canon, but really it seeks to knock the self-serious genre down a peg through parody.
|
|
A 9-year-old girl and her father were shot and killed in South Carolina on New Year's Day after being mistaken for deer by fellow hunters, officials said.
|
|
Twenty percent of people over 75, most of them women, lack sufficient levels of thyroid hormone that, among other problems, can cause symptoms of confusion commonly mistaken for dementia.
|
|
But the words play on a real fear — the fear of being mistaken for someone else, of becoming the enemy, of being one more person wrongfully arrested or killed.
|
|
Although the show's unfussy style could never have been mistaken for a documentary, its just-the-facts approach mapped out the Colombia narco state with admirable clarity and comprehensiveness.
|
|
A stainless steel wheelchair propped in the corner, "Untitled (Wheelchair II)" (1999) could be easily mistaken for museum property until one notices that its handles are twin serrated blades.
|
|
Tony Greenhand is a Portland-based artist who makes a living sculpting made-to-order joints with a DIY look that could be easily mistaken for Tom Sachs bricolages.
|
|