As Russell Berman pointed out in the Telos blog on Saturday, the Times' write-up was misleadingly selective.
Docking in outer space has become a silent, precise and misleadingly effortless ballet.
This condition, often misleadingly called heel spurs, usually gets better on its own, with rest, painkillers or specially fitted heel cushions.
While her body rots encased in its external skeleton, her lingering scent misleadingly tells the colony that all is still well.
Critics worry that, however sensible this is, it misleadingly lowers American inflation compared with countries that do not use such methods.
His background, though it might misleadingly be called privileged, was mixed up.
ECONOMIST: Wynne Godley, British economist, died on May 13th, aged 83
In the second article in our occasional series, we consider some of the emotive words that are misleadingly used to describe economic numbers.
Unemployment rates alone may even give a misleadingly rosy picture of job prospects, as only those who have been actively looking for work are included.
The measure, misleadingly named the Employee Free Choice Act, would let a union win automatic recognition simply by cajoling a majority of employees to sign cards.
One of the proposals being pushed under the banner of U.S. goods, misleadingly titled the Creating American Jobs and End Offshoring Act, would actually result in more jobs going overseas.
FORBES: U.S. Corporations Recover Even With President Obama Seemingly Working Against Them
Yet Mr David worries that Wall Street's initial strength may prove misleadingly optimistic, as it does not reflect new rules on higher capital requirements or the reforms introduced by Dodd-Frank, which threaten to curb risk-taking.
Presumably therefore MPs will want to hear from Mr Diamond whether he felt Mr Tucker was being sympathetic to the idea that Barclays should misleadingly claim that it could borrow more cheaply than was true.
President Obama's effort to repeal what he misleadingly calls "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" (which was actually the Clinton-era Pentagon directive, not the statute in question) has foisted upon his allies on Capitol Hill yet another, potentially crushing political liability.
But Public Bill Committees (they used, misleadingly, to be called Standing Committees) are now allowed to call in witnesses - and the evidence given across two intensive days this week was sometimes quite riveting - both for content and for drama.
His complaint accuses Mr. Davis, former Dewey executives Stephen DiCarmine and Joel Sanders, as well as former partners Jeffrey Kessler and James Woods, of painting a misleadingly rosy picture of Dewey's finances, and failing to disclose it owed its partners millions in deferred compensation.
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