English

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Etymology

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mis- +‎ manufacture

Verb

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mismanufacture (third-person singular simple present mismanufactures, present participle mismanufacturing, simple past and past participle mismanufactured)

  1. To manufacture improperly.
    • 1980, Minnesota Swine Herd Health Programming Conference, page 111:
      This is not to indicate that feeds are not mismanufactured and can and do create problems, which should and in most cases are handled by the company and insurance procedures.
    • 1988, Richard H. Ward, Harold E. Smith, International Terrorism: Operational Issues, page 114:
      We believe that Carlos Torres was probably the guy who mismanufactured the firing train which led to that bomb going off in Willie's hands.
    • 1990, Insurance Antitrust & Tort Reform Report, page 3:
      Thus, "federal law provides no defense to the military contractor that mismanufactures military equipment or that is itself ultimately responsible for the design defect.

Noun

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mismanufacture (countable and uncountable, plural mismanufactures)

  1. The act, process, or result of mismanufacturing.
    • 1988, M. Stuart Madden, Products Liability - Volume 1, page 25:
      Negligent manufacture or mismanufacture most frequently involves an aberrance in the manufacture, inspection, or testing of a product that creates individual or multiple product mishaps.
    • 1995, L. Neal Ellis, Charles D. Case, Toxic Tort and Hazardous Substance Litigation, page 239:
      a manufacturer reasonably would expect coverage for mismanufactures during policy period;
    • 2003, CQ: The Radio Amateurs' Journal - Volume 59, Issues 7-12, page 89:
      The firm notes that value is important; closeouts, inventory overruns, mismanufactures, and items "whose time has not come" are featured.
    • 2012, K.L. Mittal, Adhesive Joints: Formation, Characteristics, and Testing, page 397:
      One of them is the conflict between the need for a quick test to detect mismanufacture and the need for more prolonged tests with exclusion ability, i.e. one which can distinguish and exclude adhesive types known to be unsuitable in service.