misimitate

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

mis- +‎ imitate

Verb[edit]

misimitate (third-person singular simple present misimitates, present participle misimitating, simple past and past participle misimitated)

  1. To imitate badly; to produce a defective imitation of
    • 1969, Working Papers in Linguistics - Volume 1, Parts 4-6, page 87:
      Whenever anyone for some reason is motivated to improve his speech, he imitates ( or misimitates ) what he thinks to be the community norm .
    • 1971, K.R. Cama Oriental Institute, Journal - Issue 43[1], page 19:
      The SK wants his Yatì (vs. the Kavi's weak one!); but the Kavi preserves that and the final rhythm, managing the proper names with a variation of 2b (q.v.), which latter the SK partly misimitates.
    • 1990, John F. Pile, Furniture: Modern and Postmodern, Design and Technology, page 3:
      Just as historic styles are distorted, cheapened and misimitated for commercial production, modern designs can be “knocked-off" through imitation that almost always misses the point of the original, copies its least significant aspects, and introduces modifications that distort its real values.
    • 2003, Brock Dethier, From Dylan to Donne: Bridging English and Music, page 49:
      They have all misheard and misimitated song lyrics without great trauma.