0 past simple and past participle of misjudge
1 to form an opinion or idea about someone or something that is unfair or wrong:
The effect of this prior experience could induce misjudged conclusion.
He misjudged it and was severely injured, and died a couple of days later.
In the end he is misunderstood by the media and misjudged by the reading public.
Meanwhile, imperial policymakers dramatically misjudged their capacity either to rally moderates loyalists in the colonies, or to enforce their will without colonial co-operation.
If so, both parties lamentably misjudged the man.
It further posits that the opposition parties of both traditions fundamentally misread the historical evidence and hence misjudged the scale of the task confronting them.
We propose that participants use the same (misjudged) direction information and (correct) position information for planning and controlling the movement.
He gave my colleagues the impression—perhaps they misjudged him—that he would support the measure.