英:[ˌmɪsˈneɪm]
美:[ˌmɪs'neɪm]
英:[ˌmɪsˈneɪm]
美:[ˌmɪs'neɪm]
mis·name
mihs neIm
第三人称单数:misnames
现在分词:misnaming
过去式:misnamed
过去分词:misnamed
Verb
1. assign in incorrect name to;
"These misnamed philanthropists"
约在1500年,“用不合适或有害的名字称呼(某人)”; 见 mis-(1)“错误地,不当地”+ name(v.)自1520年代开始用作“用错误的名字称呼”。相关词汇: Misnamed; misnaming。
The first known use of misname was in 1537
misnameverb
to name incorrectly : miscall
misnameverb
to name incorrectly : miscall
1 Capitol might be misnamed with the term “cultist” is laughable and unconvincing.
2 It also is oddly misnamed in that it displays more sculpture than painting.
3 If you want to know what the misnamed “conservative” legal radicals have in store for us, go no further than their continuing litigation against Obamacare.
4 The misnamed “Respect for Marriage Act” is an assault on marriage, sanity, civilization and religious liberty.
5 It’s a hermit thrush, and surely no bird was so misnamed, because there is nothing reclusive or haggard about this creature.
6 “Bolverkr,” said Baugi as the first mists of winter rolled down the mountain, “you are misnamed. For you have worked nothing but good.”
7 This sort of misnaming goes back at least as far as the Romans, who expanded their empire through a process they called “pacification.”
8 Perhaps more than other forms of work, domestic labor is often misnamed as love, duty, or some kind of irresistible biological calling.
9 The now misnamed Pacific Ocean.
10 Speaking during a Commons debate on the Rwanda Bill, Ms Coffey said Labour had repeatedly misnamed Rwanda by "talking about the Kigali government".
11 That is my new name for the human species, which currently has the scientific name of Homo sapiens sapiens, or wise, wise man, which makes us the most misnamed species on the planet.
12 It seems fair to conclude that what we call “Washington’s Farewell Address” is not misnamed.
13 The Big Ten , which has 14 teams, has long been misnamed and should change it to the Sweet Sixteen.
14 He pointed to stablecoins, which he said were somewhat misnamed, as among the sources of risk.
15 The usage infantilizes both the reader and the book’s subject, adding to a centuries-long history of disrespectful misnaming — a history that White himself contested by entitling his autobiography “A Man Called White.”
16 Like all cosmic rays, they are arguably misnamed: they are not “rays” of radiation but rather subatomic particles, such as protons or even entire nuclei, zipping through space.
17 Correction: March 8, 2014 An earlier version of this article misnamed a visitor to the Music Box project.
18 The thesis is misnamed, because, as it is usually formulated, Duhem did not hold it and Quine abandoned it, but it is the fundamental conceptual underpinning of much modern history and philosophy of science.
19 "This bill is misguided, misdirected, and misnamed if the objective is to provide a safe and secure environment," Marks concluded.
20 In Tennessee, the misnamed "Moms for Liberty" group has been leveraging the state's newly passed anti-"critical race theory" law in an effort to ban books about Martin Luther King Jr. and Brown v.