More critical are analogous words that have acquired easily mistakable senses, such as eventually/eventuellement (‘possibly’), actually/actuellement (‘currently’), or to attend/attendre (‘to wait’). ❋ Unknown (2009)
The Clintons must be made to understand in no mistakable terms that this country does not belong to them, and indeed, the democratic party does not belong to them. ❋ Unknown (2008)
Well, you see, in that movie, Jesus lash out at that high rabbin in no mistakable languages, calig him names and insulting the jews, and going on with "who do you think that you are jews? you think that you are better than the rest of us?!" ❋ Unknown (2008)
For the lucky few, these ticks are minimal, boring, and mistakable for loveable quirky personality flaws. ❋ Aaron M. Wilson (2009)
This may be least true of the long "culottes", trousers most closely resembling a skirt, and at best mistakable for a skirt, but insofar as "culottes" establish the principle of dividing woman's outward apparel from the waist down, they merely disguise the grave disorder. ❋ Francis (2006)
Un-mistakable is the indelible hand writing caption that reads: "me myself" the words are double underlined over the surface of the photonear the bottom corner. ❋ Unknown (2007)
Nor is their message so brief, and so less than mistakable. ❋ Wolfe, Gene (1994)
Less mistakable was Mordred himself, riding beside Cerdic at the head of the Saxons. ❋ Stewart, Mary, 1916- (1983)
But there she stood, mistakable for no other on this wide earth! ❋ Unknown (1915)
They have no fancy, and never are surprised into a covert or witty word, such as pleased the Athenians and Italians, and was convertible into a fable not long after; but they delight in strong earthly expression, not mistakable, coarsely true to the human body, and, though spoken among princes, equally fit and welcome to the mob. ❋ Unknown (1909)
There is a scarcely mistakable class-reaction when David ❋ Unknown (1900)
However, this mistake caused sufficient confusion at Cornhill to make it necessary that the famous Charlotte, accompanied by Anne, in her quality of secondary and mistakable genius, should go to town and explain their separate existence. ❋ Unknown (1900)
Dekker, with a hardly mistakable mark; but his verse is nervous, well proportioned, well delivered, and at its best a noble medium. ❋ George Saintsbury (1889)
The nose, especially, is hardly mistakable, but the eyes have rather less expression, and the mouth less character, though the whole face (naturally) looks younger. ❋ George Saintsbury (1889)
She had declared herself his friend in a way no longer mistakable, for she must have followed her first impulse in writing such a note, and the impulse must have been a strong one. ❋ Unknown (1881)
The palms were larger than I remembered them, and the statues had grown up and seemed to have had large families since my day; but the lovely sea was the same, with all the mural decorations of the skyey horizons beyond, dim precipices and dreamy island tops, and the dozing Vesuvius mistakable for any of them. ❋ William Dean Howells (1878)
These worthy persons are not to blame; it is part of their intellectual mission to represent the petrifaction of taste, and to preserve an image of a smaller and cruder and emptier world than we now live in, a world which was feeling its way towards the simple, the natural, the honest, but was a good deal "amused and misled" by lights now no longer mistakable for heavenly luminaries. ❋ William Dean Howells (1878)