English

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Etymology

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mis- +‎ mount

Verb

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mismount (third-person singular simple present mismounts, present participle mismounting, simple past and past participle mismounted)

  1. To mount improperly.
    • 1981, Supervisory Management, page 13:
      One afternoon his foreman, Joe, passes John's area just in time to see him mismount a piece on dures.
    • 1982, Coal Age - Volume 87, Issues 1-6, page 143:
      “You can't afford to mismount a tire,” he said.
    • 2006, Tom Deck, Orvis Guide to Gunfitting, page 42:
      If the gun is mismounted then the eye-barrel relationship is off and the benefits of the gunfit exponentially decrease the farther away the bird is.

Noun

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mismount (countable and uncountable, plural mismounts)

  1. The act or process of mismounting.
    • 1890, Walter Besant, The Revolt of Man:
      She was very stiff and lame, and was made more so by a mismount, catching in her saddle and tipping down on the bruised side; but she picked up and went at it again with a will, and after a wobble or two across the road, was bowling along at the same risky pace as before.
    • 1978, Michel J. Orceyre, Robert H. Courtney, Gloria R. Bolotsky, Considerations in the Selection of Security Measures for Automatic Data Processing Systems, page 10:
      This capability can be used to reduce or eliminate significant sources of lost data and processing time, such as operator mismounts, incorrect volume specification, and a number of integrity flaws that are described in the integrity section.
    • 1987, Yamaguchi Daigaku, Technology Reports of the Yamaguchi University - Volume 4, page 136:
      In some cases we also encountered very bad results probably due to the mismount of the sample.
    • 2006, Tom Deck, Orvis Guide to Gunfitting, page 42:
      If the gun is mismounted then the eye-barrel relationship is off and the benefits of the gunfit exponentially decrease the farther away the bird is. A mismount at twenty-five yards often leads to a crippled bird, and the dog often has a hard time finding it. Also that same mismount on a forty-yard bird is probably a clean miss.
    • 2017, Justin Lichter, Shawn Forry, Ultralight Winter Travel, page 146:
      A mismount can allow them to rip out of the ski, but this is highly unlikely, since you'll likely be putting even less torque on these bindings.