misplace
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mɪsˈpleɪs/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -eɪs
Verb
misplace (third-person singular simple present misplaces, present participle misplacing, simple past and past participle misplaced)
- (transitive) To put something somewhere and then forget its location; to mislay.
- I might have misplaced my umbrella; do you know where it is?
- 2014 September 24, Jen Christensen, “Early memory lapses may be sign of dementia”, in CNN[1]:
- At least once a week a patient will come into Dr. Thomas Loepfe’s busy geriatric clinic in Lacrosse, Wisconsin, with a worry. She will tell him she’s been misplacing her glasses lately, or he’ll say he’s concerned about losing the car keys.
- (figuratively) To apply one's talents inappropriately.
- 2024 June 16, Senay Boztas, “‘The brain is very vulnerable’: Dutch cyclists urged to wear helmets as road deaths rise”, in The Guardian[4]:
- Bart Groothuijze, who runs the Castodian foundation promoting safer motorbiking, blames a misplaced sense of freedom and vanity.
- To put something in the wrong location.
- 1808, R.s. Skillern, A New System of English Grammar, page 128:
- Every word in English of more than one Syllable has a fixed accent established by the custom of the language, to misplace which is as offensive to the propriety of speech, as to missound the vowel.
Synonyms
Translations
to put something somewhere and then forget its location
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