0 past simple and past participle of misrepresent
1 to describe falsely an idea, opinion, or situation, often in order to get an advantage:
In this way the frontiers of the feasible regions of the mechanism space were misrepresented.
Indeed, group analyses largely misrepresented the types of change parents' communication underwent, and how they might relate to children's development.
In other words, under a high degree of media openness, it becomes very unlikely that states' capability and resolve can be misrepresented or disguised.
In many cases, men who misrepresented their identities at the polls simply could not be found after the election was held.
The views of those they discuss are misrepresented, frequently egregiously.
He was worried, too, that what he had said would be misrepresented.
Many aspects of modern life had previously been disregarded or misrepresented in traditional teaching materials.
Their agency-linkage model is underidentified and fails to convince the reader that previous studies have seriously misrepresented the role of class interests in state policy.