Misjudgment \Mis*judg"ment\, n. [Written also misjudgement.] A wrong or unjust judgment.
But even the executives concede that the story of how Circle K got caught flatfooted reflects sloppy planning, botched employee communications and misjudgment of public reaction.
Mr. Feinberg's description of Mr. Hoover as a "world-class fearmonger" is a gross misjudgment of this great man.
Col. North admitted preparing false letters to cover up the fact that he hadn't paid for the work, describing his action as "probably the grossest misjudgment that I have made in my life."
But Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif., accused Bush of a "policy of appeasement" toward Iraq. "There was a total misjudgment of the policies and goals of Saddam Hussein to the very moment his troops invaded a neighboring country," he said.
But no misjudgment here: the film is still a classic.
That he made a serious misjudgment in believing he could be the corporation's first freelance director-general is beyond doubt.
In areas where we have fallen behind, say in some areas of semiconductor technology, we can blame our own misjudgment more than the government-led attacks from the Far East.
One reason was the group's misjudgment in failing to explain its side of the story.
This can lead to extreme misjudgment.' Standard & Poor's, Moody's greatest rival, introduced counterparty ratings in 1991, because of the broadening use of derivatives.
"I hear it's going to be very tough, a lot of different counts, sufficient to indicate a pattern of misjudgment or ethical lapses," Edwards said.
It would be a misjudgment.
Because these attributed the delay of measures solely to the authority's misjudgment of the economy, I think the most important factor in the argument was missing.
The French obsession with Germany has led to another and possibly tragic misjudgment.