unmisleadingly

English

Etymology

unmisleading + -ly

Pronunciation

Adverb

unmisleadingly (not comparable)

  1. In an unmisleading manner.
    • 1988: Ninian Smart, John Clayton, Patrick Sherry, and Steven T. Katz [eds.], Nineteenth-Century Religious Thought in the West, page 171 (Cambridge University Press Archive; →ISBN, 9780521359641)
      Schopenhauer’s ethics could be unmisleadingly described as a philosophical elaboration of the Christian idea of an unreserved love, whereas Kant’s can be thought of as a Christian ethic in which duty to superhuman authority — in this case, the authority of reason — has replaced the sentiment of love.
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