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Sentences with misapprehend

mis·ap·pre·hend
M m
  • And yet, if she realised that she had been misapprehending the problem or if she worked out for herself some possible solution to it, she would reveal her changed thinking at once.
  • The appellant thus argued that the trial judge misapprehended the facts and/or misapplied the appropriate standard of care to the facts.
  • In my review of the evidence presented on the temporary care and custody hearing and the reasons for decision of the presiding justice, I do not see, in any respect whatsoever, that she misapprehended the evidence.
  • The difficult balancing exercise is for the Board, and not for the court, to perform and the Board cannot do this if it misapprehends the principles it must apply.
  • It was a lesson I had misapprehended as a small child, when I went to synagogue with my father.
  • The mother must ultimately establish before the appellate tribunal that the motions judge erred in principle or materially misapprehended the evidence.
  • The applicant also complains that the Minister has, in effect, misapprehended his family circumstances and the hardships that will be caused to his wife and his 14-month-old child if his application fails.
  • One infers that they thought he did not have reasonable grounds, but they did so in circumstances where they have misapprehended the factual circumstances.
  • China's industrial competitors, including the U.S., often misapprehend the source of China's productive strength.
  • That was a case of an architect who misapprehended his position.
  • This contention misapprehends the basis for their potential liability.
  • Most people were befuddled by or misunderstood Full Metal Jacket and had misapprehended The Shining.
  • Ultimately, the point will be that when one looks to the letter that goes to the Tribunal from the adviser, the Tribunal has not misapprehended the case put, but rather the reasons are responsive to the case as put then.
  • His Honour did not misapprehend the facts, he did not misapply legal principle, he did not miscalculate the damages, nor did he err in the exercise of his discretion.
  • On the application for special leave it appears that the Court may have misapprehended the situation so far as the Full Court was concerned.
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