misvoice
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]misvoice (third-person singular simple present misvoices, present participle misvoicing, simple past and past participle misvoiced)
- To speak for in an incorrect and erroneous manner
- 1898, Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of Isham G. Harris, page 165:
- Law is but the voice; government iself only the body; civilization is the essence, the spirit—the spirit of ages of progress and conquest from rude nature and ruder men—a spirit sometimes, alas! misvoiced; sometimes misembodied.
- 1904, Canada. Parliament. House of Commons, House of Commons Debates, Official Report - Volume 2, page 3611:
- That statement was received with applause, and the hon. gentleman, addressing himself to the hon. member for Selkirk, said: 'the hon. gentleman will see from these manifestations of opinion that I have not misvoiced the views of the hon. gentlemen who sit around me.'
- 2012, Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor, Sariya Contractor, Muslim Women in Britain: De-mystifying the Muslimah, page 35:
- My reading for this chapter confirmed that the Muslim woman was misvoiced or un-voiced in almost all discrourses surrounding her life. While the authenticity of various voices remains problematic, it was clear to me that she needed to and could voice herself.
- To say with the wrong tone.
- 2001, Christopher Ricks, Reviewery, page 64:
- Ackroyd's solicitude for Eliot here seems to me punctilious and, though not misplaced, misvoiced: 'For a man who was peculiarly attentive to the manners and to the formal courtesies of "society", the behaviour of a deranged wife would inevitably lead to anxiety and a sense of shame not far from panic.'