English

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Etymology

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From mis- +‎ fix.

Verb

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misfix (third-person singular simple present misfixes, present participle misfixing, simple past and past participle misfixed)

  1. To fix improperly.
    • 1886, William Vickroy Marshall, Unfair Distribution of Earnings: The Evil Effects and the Remedy, page 228:
      Still, if he does not know how he has misfixed himself, he knows that he is misfixed for we hear his murmurings of complaint, and we know the nature of them.
    • 1997, William Safire, Watching My Language: Adventures in the Word, page 33:
      Bush may have intended to repeat the Republican derogation of “deadbeat dads,” but misfixed it to “ deadbeat fathers."
    • 2003, J.G. Richardson, Supervision of Concrete Construction 2, page 21:
      Any error in reading the drawings or misfixing the reinforcement may have disasterous[sic] results.

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