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Mistake   /mɪstˈeɪk/   Listen
Mistake

noun
1.
A wrong action attributable to bad judgment or ignorance or inattention.  Synonyms: error, fault.  "She was quick to point out my errors" , "I could understand his English in spite of his grammatical faults"
2.
An understanding of something that is not correct.  Synonyms: misapprehension, misunderstanding.  "Make no mistake about his intentions" , "There must be some misunderstanding--I don't have a sister"
3.
Part of a statement that is not correct.  Synonym: error.
verb
(past mistook; past part. mistaken; pres. part. mistaking)
1.
Identify incorrectly.  Synonym: misidentify.
2.
To make a mistake or be incorrect.  Synonyms: err, slip.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Mistake" Quotes from Famous Books



... gold." If Little Americans have thought so of their country in these stirring days, and have fancied that initial reverses would induce it to abandon its duty, its rights, and its great permanent interests, they will live to see their mistake. They will find it giving a deaf ear to these unworthy complaints of temporary trouble or present loss, and turning gladly from all this incoherent and resultless clamor to the new world opening around us. Already it draws us out of ourselves. The provincial isolation is gone; and provincial ...
— Problems of Expansion - As Considered In Papers and Addresses • Whitelaw Reid

... the club box he had perceived how grave a mistake that would be; and, though he was more than ever determined to "see the thing through," he felt less chivalrously eager to champion his betrothed's cousin than before their ...
— The Age of Innocence • Edith Wharton

... allowed to speak in that way, broken loose inside of him. He could hardly beeathe; he felt that his body was about to explode into a thousand fragments. He simply snarled out " What? " Almost at once he saw that she had at last goaded him into making a serious tactical mistake. It must be admitted that it is only when the relations between a man and a woman are the relations of wedlock, or at least an intimate resemblance to it, that the man snarls out " What? " to the woman. Mere lovers say ...
— Active Service • Stephen Crane

... been a mistake, my friend," she observed; "one never can tell until he's tried it—and failed. I mightn't have missed had I gone on another schedule. However, the past is to profit by, and to forget if we can't remember it pleasantly. So let us return to the business in hand, Marston; it's a rattling ...
— The Cab of the Sleeping Horse • John Reed Scott

... mines, and the labour are pawned for the payment of the interest of the Boroughmongers debt. Your labour, mind, Jack, is pawned for the one-half of its worth. But you will naturally ask, how is it that the nation, that everybody submits to this? There's your mistake, Jack. It is not everybody that submits. In the first place there are the Boroughmongers themselves and all their long tribe of relations, legitimate and spurious, who profit from the taxes, and who have the church livings, which they enjoy without giving the poor any ...
— Political Pamphlets • George Saintsbury


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