mistend

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

mis- +‎ tend

Verb[edit]

mistend (third-person singular simple present mistends, present participle mistending, simple past and past participle mistended)

  1. To tend poorly
    • 1907, Arthur Judson Brown, The Foreign Missionary: An Incarnation of a World Movement, page 365:
      All over asia, one sees disease and bodily injury so untended, or what is worse, mistended, that the resultant condition is as dreadfu as it is intolerable.·
    • 1939, Gustavus Hill Robinson, Handbook of Admiralty Law in the United States, page 492:
      In the R. G. Winslow the vessel was being loaded with grain from an elevator, the grain flowing into the ship by its own gravity through a pipe which was mistended on board the vessel by the mate, as a result of which mistending some of the grain was lost.
    • 1997, Philip Morrison, Nothing Is Too Wonderful to Be True, page 55:
      They freely employed the techniques of the carnival and the stage, with accomplices planted in the crowd, prearranged mistending of the fire to darken the scene at the crucial moment, and so on.
    • 2014, Nigel Wood, David Lodge, Modern Criticism and Theory: A Reader, Routledge, →ISBN:
      The long view of the place as tended and mistended by generations of precursors allows him to inhabit it with awareness and care.

Dutch[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)

Participle[edit]

mistend

  1. present participle of misten

Declension[edit]

Inflection of mistend
uninflected mistend
inflected mistende
positive
predicative/adverbial mistend
mistende
indefinite m./f. sing. mistende
n. sing. mistend
plural mistende
definite mistende
partitive mistends