MISJUDGE


Meaning of MISJUDGE in English

mis ‧ judge /ˌmɪsˈdʒʌdʒ/ BrE AmE verb [transitive]

1 . to form a wrong or unfair opinion about a person or a situation:

The government misjudged the mood of the electorate.

I think you’ve misjudged her.

2 . to guess an amount or distance wrongly SYN miscalculate :

I misjudged the speed of the car coming towards me.

—misjudgment ( also misjudgement British English ) noun [uncountable and countable] :

He accused the government of a serious foreign policy misjudgement.

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THESAURUS

▪ misunderstand to think that someone means one thing, when in fact they mean something else:

I think you've misunderstood what I'm saying.

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Some companies appear to have misunderstood the new rules.

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Don't misunderstand me - I have nothing against these people.

▪ get somebody/something wrong especially spoken to misunderstand someone or something - used especially in everyday spoken English:

Looks like you've got it all wrong.

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You've got me all wrong - that's not what I meant.

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Tell me if I've got it wrong.

▪ mistake to misunderstand someone's intentions, and react in the wrong way:

He was a very private man, and some people mistook this for unfriendliness.

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I thought she wanted us to leave her alone, but I may been mistaken.

▪ misread/misjudge to wrongly believe that someone’s actions show that they have a particular opinion or feeling, or that a situation means that you should behave in particular way:

The party completely misread the mood of the voters at the last election.

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Eddie wondered if he should be scared, too. Maybe he had misjudged the situation.

▪ misinterpret to not understand the true meaning of someone’s actions or words, so that you believe something that is not in fact true:

A lot of people misinterpreted what I was saying, and have called me a racist.

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Struggling with an unfamiliar language, the simplest conversations were misinterpreted.

▪ misconstrue formal to misunderstand something that someone has said or done:

She claimed that members of the press had misconstrued her comments.

▪ miss the point to not understand the main part or meaning of what someone is saying or what something is intended to do:

I think you're missing the whole point of the film.

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If he thinks it's all about how much profit he can make, then he's missing the point.

▪ get the wrong end of the stick British English informal to make a mistake about one part of something that you are told, so that you understand the rest of it in completely the wrong way:

Maybe I got the wrong end of the stick. I thought she was leaving him, not the other way round.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.