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In every instance, great care has to be taken when living conditions are being deduced from archaeological evidence, since there is a real risk of misinterpretation.
To avoid the risk of misinterpretation, state your intention clearly: 'John, can I buy you lunch/a drink after work?
Washington and Moscow have also proposed exchanging radar information and other figures this winter to diminish the risk of misinterpretations.
Furthermore, mention cannot be made of the EDF without referring to other risks of misinterpretation.
"Since there does seem to be a risk of misinterpretation ... perhaps it would be best if the girls themselves conducted the stringent parts of the drama.
Rabbi Breuer saw the risk of misinterpretation of his grandfather's ideas (and confusion with Torah Umadda) especially post-war.
Dr. Jonsen said the panel concluded that "that message had to go out, even at the risk of misinterpretation by people who will say, 'It's not our problem.' "
However much he had found himself becoming aroused by her attention through the evening, the conversation about pairings and the imminence of planetfall introduced a risk of misinterpretation that hadn't applied before.
Torah im Derech Eretz: Rabbi Breuer saw the risk of misinterpretation of his grandfather's ideas on how Judaism could be harmonised with the general culture of the outside world.
Provided (i) the audit file explains the context in which particular stamped documents have been examined, and (ii) the significance of special audit marks or ticks are standardised and understood by the audit staff, there should be little risk of misinterpretation by third parties after the event.
Late in the set, a drunken Matt Skiba of fellow Chicago punk rock band Alkaline Trio joined Slapstick on stage, slurring, gushing, giving hugs to all the band members, and even engaging in drunken humour at risk of misinterpretation.
Now in the above definition the word sensation is used to denote an objective representation of sense; and, to avoid continually running the risk of misinterpretation, we shall call that which must always remain purely subjective, and is absolutely incapable of forming a representation of an object, by the familiar name of feeling.