misrelegate

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

mis- +‎ relegate

Verb[edit]

misrelegate (third-person singular simple present misrelegates, present participle misrelegating, simple past and past participle misrelegated)

  1. To relegate inappropriately.
    • 1965, Industrial and Labor Relations Review, volume 19, page 625:
      "Job-consciousness," that suggestive concept so regularly re-examined and so frequently misrelegated to the mythology of the past, is, in my estimation, still a useful, dynamic insight.
    • 2001, Zdravko Planinc, Politics, Philosophy, Writing: Plato's Art of Caring for Souls, page 63:
      However, this anticipates what needs to be shown, and ignores what I have just claimed: the widespread failure to recognize that the dialogue is indeed about virtue, being instead misrelegated to the specialists of academic epistemology, with only its famous "paradox" (perhaps along with Socrates' seemingly bizarre resolution) being extracted for use in elementary courses and textbooks introducing "The Basic Problems of Philosophy."
    • 2013, Gabe Rikard, Authority and the Mountaineer in Cormac McCarthy's Appalachia, page 72:
      He is “misrelegated to a state mental hospital” where he is studied, categorized, made subject to discipline “at the hands of well-meaning representatives of the social order” (Bell 9).