misconceive
11misconceive — mis|con|ceive [ ,mıskən siv ] verb transitive FORMAL to fail to understand something correctly …
12misconceive — v. conceive incorrectly; misunderstand; misjudge …
13misconceive — verb 1》 fail to understand correctly. 2》 judge or plan badly …
14misconceive — v. a. Misapprehend, misunderstand, misjudge, mistake …
15misconceive — v misunderstand, misapprehend, misconstrue, misread, misinterpret; misjudge, miscalculate; form the wrong notion, get the wrong idea; get off on the wrong foot, get a false start, jump the gun, go off half cocked …
16misconceive — mis·conceive …
17misconceive — mis•con•ceive [[t]ˌmɪs kənˈsiv[/t]] v. t. v. i. ceived, ceiv•ing to interpret wrongly; misunderstand • Etymology: 1350–1400 mis con•ceiv′er, n. mis con•cep′tion kənˈsɛp ʃən n …
18misconceive — [c]/mɪskənˈsiv / (say miskuhn seev) verb (misconceived, misconceiving) –verb (t) 1. to conceive wrongly; misunderstand. –verb (i) 2. to misunderstand something or someone. –misconceiver, noun …
19misconceive — v. 1 intr. (often foll. by of) have a wrong idea or conception. 2 tr. (as misconceived adj.) badly planned, organized, etc. 3 tr. misunderstand (a word, person, etc.). Derivatives: misconceiver n. misconception n …
20Misconceived — Misconceive Mis con*ceive , v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p. {Misconceived}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Misconceiving}.] To conceive wrongly; to interpret incorrectly; to receive a false notion of; to misunderstand; to misjudge; to misapprehend. [1913 Webster]… …