misapprehend การใช้
- Norton misapprehends the current economy of the West, Watson said.
- But they misapprehend what their constituency really wants.
- We believe this statement misapprehends the law.
- The question totally misapprehends the process.
- Please don t misapprehend my comments.
- Rather, there are simply problematic individuals who misapprehend the scientific literature and the scientific consensus.
- Appellants'conception of the constitutional violation misapprehends our holding in Shaw and the Equal Protection precedent upon which Shaw relied.
- Appellants'conception of the constitutional violation misapprehends our holding in Shaw and the equal protection precedent upon which Shaw relied.
- The flaw in this argument is that it misreads ?514 ( c ) ( 2 ) and consequently misapprehends its purpose.
- To expect otherwise was to misapprehend the nature of both . ( Which is not to say that he shouldn't have taken the gig.
- His earlier removal had the edit summary " " We never use blogs for living persons . " which seems to somewhat misapprehend what the Wikipedia use of " news organization official sites " actually allows.
- One perspective is that to deduce from the evidence a definite Anglican Shakespeare is to misapprehend the religious circumstances of the time, the word " Anglican " not existing until nearly two decades after the writer's death and contemporary historians not recognising Anglicanism as a firm organisation or religious identity during his lifetime.
- In Spinoza's account, as described by Deleuze, " consciousness misapprehends all of Nature ", and " . . . all one needs in order to moralize is to fail to understand . " Misunderstanding a law makes it appear in the form of a moral'You must .'" The domain of the eternal truths of nature and that of the moral laws of institutions can be separated through considering their effects.
- The character Anna in particular illustrates another aspect of the American myth, according to Stacy I . Morgan, as Anna dreams of becoming " like the Americanos . " However, Morgan writes, Anna attempts to move up in class by wearing shiny heels and an elaborate gown, and thereby " misapprehends the complexity of American class identity by reducing it to material cultural signs . " Eventually, her dress becomes filthy from being dragged in the mud, and Anna must wear it " pinned like a diaper between her legs, " which Morgan claims illustrates how that " the icon intended as a symbol of maturity and class status " becomes a symbol of " Anna's childishness . " In addition, Morgan notes that Anna is " tragically pathetic, " forbidden by Big Mat to go out in public, the space " for which such ostentatious apparel is designed ."