- And I tell the Japanese side now, stop talking nonsense about China's development and misleading the public.
- The title is somewhat misleading.
- Misleading Ideas on Economic Globalization and the Countermeasures for China.
- The concept underpinned of fire seems much more appealing however, aptly comparing the damage caused by the spread of misleading facts to the trail of destruction left in the wake of a wildfire.
- However, like many other Chinese data, it is misleading.
- Only one can be the best, so the others are misleading, aren't they?
- With such person misleading the public opinion, how can the Japanese people view China's development in an objective and rational way and build up confidence in China-Japan relations?
- It would be misleading to say that we were friends.
- This measure is simple, but also misleading and dangerous.
- It can also be misleading.
- This basic fault can produce a misleading sense of national economic health.
- I just think, from far away, that flesh-colored underdress could be a little misleading.
- Don't forget it's often misleading information, and sometimes harmful.
- General concern about misleading tactics that advertisers employ is centered on the use of exaggeration.
- " If you build it they will come " is a misleading belief .
- This is misleading.
- The evolutionary effect of competition on species has been referred to as "species selection"; however, this description is potentially misleading.
- Such case control studies can be misleading, however.
- Shampaign is a fake, insincere, or misleading campaign, particularly for political office or commercial gain.
- Guide without misleading.
- The ambassador called the report deceitful and misleading.
- Looking only at that 15.2 percent "surge" would be misleading.
- Some of the information was dangerously misleading.
- As mass can vary in several circumstances this definition is unsound and misleading.
- The article contains several misleading statements.
- The 2014 deadline is misleading.
- The above two sets of data meet the screening criteria.
- These chemical pollutants are currently not a criteria air pollutant, as defined by the U.S. Clean Air Act.
- British defence policy had to meet three criteria if it was to succeed.
- Among other requirements, they must offer a side dish that meets similar criteria, with fewer than 200 calories and less than 35% of its calories from sugar.
- It is hard to make out what criteria are used.
- This response meets all of the 5-level criteria from the Scoring Guide.
- In choosing a method for determining climatic conditions that existed in the past, paleoclimatologists invoke four principal criteria.
- The question is, which criteria?
- Those perceptions depend upon their sharing criteria and authorities in case of dissensus.
- There are strict criteria for inclusion in the competition.
- They'd then go further to explain the specific, and objective, criteria the employee must meet to receive their desired rewards.
- While this was the case for England, other nations, such as Japan, the Netherlands and France also met some of these criteria but were not industrialising.
- As design studies progressed it was found that several airfoil shapes could be used to satisfy the new performance criteria.
- Clayton et al. developed criteria to test for episodic memory in animals.