misweigh
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]misweigh (third-person singular simple present misweighs, present participle misweighing, simple past and past participle misweighed)
- To give an inaccurate measurement of the weight (of something).
- 1973, Bill Severn, The Right to Privacy, page 27:
- An honest butcher, for instance, might sue if his picture were used with an article about butchers who misweigh meat.
- 1975, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Agriculture and Forestry. Subcommittee on Foreign Agricultural Policy, Grain Inspection, page 66:
- How can you misweigh with that kind of equipment?
- 1984, Law Enforcement Responsibilities: Office of Inspector General:
- Violations—Bribery of inspectors to falsely grade or misweigh grain, to alter or counterfeit official inspection certificates, or to falsely represent that an official grain inspection has been made.
- 2021, Jeffrey K. Hass, Wartime Suffering and Survival, page 58:
- In February 1942, Nina Kobyzeva complained that civilians did not receive full rations for obvious reasons: "Clerks are finagling people like beasts, they misweigh [food]. Scales are not always verified, and besides these ten grams [of food] they try to finagle buyers."
- To treat (something) as having a level of importance different from its actual importance.
- 2002, R.A. Salvatore, Ascendance, page 75:
- And you misweigh the situation.
- 2015, Tren Griffin, Charlie Munger: The Complete Investor, page 80:
- This psychological tendency to misweigh what is easily recalled is a major reason why people are attracted to lotteries despite the dismal odds of winning, as they have seen other ordinary people win a lottery on the news.
- 2019, Conor Mchugh, Jonathan Way, Daniel Whiting, Metaepistemology, page 209:
- But despite all of this, Carl might misweigh his evidence, treating his independent evidence about P as outweighing Carla's testimony out of disrespect for Carla, rather than on the basis of his appreciation that she is trying to trick him.
- 2021, Daniel Crosby, The Laws of Wealth:
- A big part of this human underperformance is our tendency to misweigh the importance of one variable versus another.
Noun
[edit]misweigh (plural misweighs)
- An instance of misweighing (giving an inaccurate measurement of weight)
- 1978, AATCC, Book of Papers, page 142:
- If there is a misweigh or misfigure, the Dye Superintendent needs to know who was responsible.
- 1993, Robert H. Leach, The Printing Ink Manual, page 831831:
- Discrepancies in the gloss level of the batch sample could be caused by a misweigh of one or more of the ink components or, on the continuous type of mills, it could be due to an incorrect mill setting or condition.
- 2009, Steve Kilczewski, 66th Porcelain Enamel Institute Technical Forum, page 73:
- If the furnace settings are correct, this condition would indicate a misweigh, usually meaning the silica was probably left out of the mill.