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单词 misrepresentation
释义

misrepresentation

enUK

mis·rep·re·sent

M0341300 (mĭs-rĕp′rĭ-zĕnt′)tr.v. mis·rep·re·sent·ed, mis·rep·re·sent·ing, mis·rep·re·sents 1. To give an incorrect or misleading representation of.2. To serve incorrectly or dishonestly as an official representative of.
mis·rep′re·sen·ta′tion n.mis·rep′re·sen′ta·tive (-zĕn′tə-tĭv) adj.
Thesaurus
Noun1.misrepresentation - a misleading falsehoodmisrepresentation - a misleading falsehood deception, deceitbill of goods - communication (written or spoken) that persuades someone to accept something untrue or undesirable; "they tried to sell me a bill of goods about a secondhand car"humbug, snake oil - communication (written or spoken) intended to deceivefalsehood, untruth, falsity - a false statementhalf-truth - a partially true statement intended to deceive or misleadwindow dressing, facade - a showy misrepresentation intended to conceal something unpleasantoverstatement, exaggeration, magnification - making to seem more important than it really issnow job - a long and elaborate misrepresentationdissembling, feigning, pretense, pretence - pretending with intention to deceivesubterfuge, blind - something intended to misrepresent the true nature of an activity; "he wasn't sick--it was just a subterfuge"; "the holding company was just a blind"hanky panky, hocus-pocus, jiggery-pokery, skulduggery, skullduggery, slickness, trickery - verbal misrepresentation intended to take advantage of you in some wayduplicity, fraudulence - a fraudulent or duplicitous representationequivocation, evasion - a statement that is not literally false but that cleverly avoids an unpleasant truth
2.misrepresentation - a willful perversion of factsmisrepresentation - a willful perversion of facts falsificationactus reus, wrongful conduct, misconduct, wrongdoing - activity that transgresses moral or civil law; "he denied any wrongdoing"overrefinement, twisting, straining, torture, distortion - the act of distorting something so it seems to mean something it was not intended to meantergiversation, equivocation - falsification by means of vague or ambiguous languagelying, prevarication, fabrication - the deliberate act of deviating from the truthdissimulation, deception, dissembling, deceit - the act of deceiving

misrepresentation

nounAn untrue declaration:canard, cock-and-bull story, falsehood, falsity, fib, fiction, inveracity, lie, misstatement, prevarication, story, tale, untruth.Informal: fish story, tall tale.Slang: whopper.
Translations
travisamento

misrepresentation

enUK

misrepresentation

A contract law term for falsely or imperfectly representing a thing; distortion of facts; misleading; lying.

misrepresentation

Malpractice Representing falsely or imperfectly; lying. Cf Fraud.

misrepresentation

enUK
Related to misrepresentation: Innocent misrepresentation

Misrepresentation

An assertion or manifestation by words or conduct that is not in accord with the facts.

Misrepresentation is a tort, or a civil wrong. This means that a misrepresentation can create civil liability if it results in a pecuniary loss. For example, assume that a real estate speculator owns swampland but advertises it as valuable commercially zoned land. This is a misrepresentation. If someone buys the land relying on the speculator's statement that it is commercially valuable, the buyer may sue the speculator for monetary losses resulting from the purchase.

To create liability for the maker of the statement, a misrepresentation must be relied on by the listener or reader. Also, the speaker must know that the listener is relying on the factual correctness of the statement. Finally, the listener's reliance on the statement must have been reasonable and justified, and the misrepresentation must have resulted in a pecuniary loss to the listener.

A misrepresentation need not be intentionally false to create liability. A statement made with conscious ignorance or a reckless disregard for the truth can create liability. Nondisclosure of material or important facts by a fiduciary or an expert, such as a doctor, lawyer, or accountant, can result in liability. If the speaker is engaged in the business of selling products, any statement, no matter how innocent, may create liability if the statement concerns the character or quality of a product and the statement is not true. In such a case, the statement must be one of fact. This does not include so-called puffing, or the glowing opinions of a seller in the course of a sales pitch (such statements as "you'll love this car," or "it's a great deal").

A misrepresentation in a contract can give a party the right to rescind the contract. A Rescission of a contract returns the parties to the positions they held before the contract was made. A party can rescind a contract for misrepresentation only if the statement was material, or critical, to the agreement.

A misrepresentation on the part of the insured in an insurance policy can give the insurer the right to cancel the policy or refuse a claim. An insurer may do this only if the misrepresentation was material to the risk insured against and would have influenced the insurer in determining whether to issue a policy. For example, if a person seeking auto insurance states that she has no major chronic illnesses, the insurer's subsequent discovery that the applicant had an incurable disease at the time she completed the insurance form probably will not give the insurer the right to cancel the auto policy. However, if the person was seeking Health Insurance, such a misrepresentation may justify cancellation of the policy or a denial of coverage. Generally, cancellation or denial of insurance coverage for a misrepresentation can occur only if the insurance applicant was aware of the inaccuracy of the statement.

Further readings

Kionka, Edward J. 1988. Torts. St. Paul, Minn.: West.

Cross-references

Consumer Protection; Product Liability; Sales Law; Tort Law.

misrepresentation

n. the crime of misstating facts to obtain money, goods, or benefits of another to which the accused is not entitled. Examples: a person 1) falsely claims to represent a charity to obtain a donation which he/she keeps; 2) says a painting is a genuine Jackson Pollock when it is a fake, and is thus able to sell it for a price much greater than its true value. Misrepresentation is also called "false pretenses." (See: false pretenses)

misrepresentation

representing something incorrectly. A misrepresentation is distinct from a statement of opinion. It may have the effect of making an otherwise valid contract void or at least voidable. A distinction is made between innocent, negligent and fraudulent misrepresentations. At best, an innocent misrepresentation may affect a contract, a negligent misrepresentation may attract in addition liability for negligence and a fraudulent misrepresentation may attract damages for the fraud and deceit. See also MISTAKE.

MISREPRESENTATION, contracts. The statement made by a party to a contract, that a thing relating to it is in fact in a particular way, when he knows it is not so.
2. The misrepresentation must be both false and fraudulent, in order to make the party making it, responsible to the other for damages. 3 Com. R. 413; 10 Mass. R. 197; 1 Rep. Const. Court, 328, 475, Yelv. 21 a, note l; Peake's Cas. 115; 3 Campb. 154; Marsh. Ins. B. 1, c. 10, s. 1. And see Representation. It is not every misrepresentation which will make a party liable; when a mere misstatement of a fact has been erroneously made, without fraud, in a casual, improvident communication, respecting a matter which the person to whom the communication was made, and who had an interest in it, should not have taken upon trust, but is bound to inquire himself, and had the means of ascertaining the truth, there would be no responsibility; 5 Maule & Selw. 380; 1 Chit. Pr. 836; 1 Sim. R. 13, 63; and when the informant was under no legal pledge or obligation as to the precise accuracy and correctness of his statement, the other party can maintain no action for the consequences of that statement, upon which it was his indiscretion to place reliance. 12 East, 638; see also, 2 Cox, R. 134; 13 Ves. 133; 3 Bos. & Pull. 370; 2 East, 103; 3 T. R, 56, 61; 3 Bulstr. 93; 6 Ves. 183; 3 Ves. & Bea. 110; 4 Dall. R. 250. Vide Concealment; Representation; Suggestio falsi; Suppressio veri.

misrepresentation

enUK

misrepresentation

See fraud.

misrepresentation

enUK
Related to misrepresentation: Innocent misrepresentation
  • noun

Synonyms for misrepresentation

noun an untrue declaration

Synonyms

  • canard
  • cock-and-bull story
  • falsehood
  • falsity
  • fib
  • fiction
  • inveracity
  • lie
  • misstatement
  • prevarication
  • story
  • tale
  • untruth
  • fish story
  • tall tale
  • whopper

Synonyms for misrepresentation

noun a misleading falsehood

Synonyms

  • deception
  • deceit

Related Words

  • bill of goods
  • humbug
  • snake oil
  • falsehood
  • untruth
  • falsity
  • half-truth
  • window dressing
  • facade
  • overstatement
  • exaggeration
  • magnification
  • snow job
  • dissembling
  • feigning
  • pretense
  • pretence
  • subterfuge
  • blind
  • hanky panky
  • hocus-pocus
  • jiggery-pokery
  • skulduggery
  • skullduggery
  • slickness
  • trickery
  • duplicity
  • fraudulence
  • equivocation
  • evasion

noun a willful perversion of facts

Synonyms

  • falsification

Related Words

  • actus reus
  • wrongful conduct
  • misconduct
  • wrongdoing
  • overrefinement
  • twisting
  • straining
  • torture
  • distortion
  • tergiversation
  • equivocation
  • lying
  • prevarication
  • fabrication
  • dissimulation
  • deception
  • dissembling
  • deceit
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更新时间:2024/12/22 18:40:54