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misleadingly Meaning in Bengali







misleadingly's Usage Examples:

RDF/XML is sometimes misleadingly called simply RDF because it was introduced among the other W3C specifications.


It is sometimes misleadingly called Kaiserjass, although it has nothing to do with the Jass family.


parallel banded varieties of alabaster, marble, obsidian and opal, and misleadingly to materials with contorted banding, such as "Cave Onyx" and "Mexican.


Although the marketing side of Kellogg's misleadingly sold the idea that each individual loop color was a different flavor.


hence gamma ray bursts produced this way would be expected to be in old (misleadingly called "early type") galaxies.


misnomer may also be simply a word that someone uses incorrectly or misleadingly.


is organised by the Football Association of Ireland, it is sometimes misleadingly referred to as the FAI President's Cup.


They have sometimes misleadingly been called unnovae.


The helmet was misleadingly named as an "Illyrian" type due to many early finds coming from Illyria.


passengers rather than cargo, and they had to be pushed by a small (and misleadingly labeled) towboat, also known as a pusher, which was attached to it.


misleadingly suggesting relationships between independent and dependent variables.


The name nalewka is sometimes misleadingly used for a variety of commercially produced alcohols sold in Poland,.


It is also, somewhat misleadingly, called Xi'an drum music.


cornū, cornūs or cornum, "horn", plural cornua, sometimes translated misleadingly as "cornet") was an ancient Roman brass instrument about 3 m (9.


perpetuals), and more inclined to repeat-flowering than the somewhat misleadingly-named hybrid perpetuals (if not quite as ever-blooming as the teas).


It was also, rather misleadingly, known as "graphics RAM".


most of the property of a business, and other receiverships (sometimes misleadingly called fixed charge receiverships) where the receiver has limited control.


superego and identification in Massenpsychologie (1921) by Sigmund Freud, misleadingly translated as Group psychology.


It is also known as an epithelioid and spindle-cell nevus, and misleadingly as a benign juvenile melanoma, and Spitz's juvenile melanoma).


The church is sometimes misleadingly called St.



Synonyms:

deceptively; deceivingly;

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