astray

IPA: ʌstrˈeɪ

adverb

  • In a wrong or unknown and wrongly-motivated direction.
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Examples of "astray" in Sentences

  • Where readers often go astray is that they fail to realize that the men who enacted the U.S.
  • I am sure that inclusion of political thought considered by the government as astray is next.
  • In music such tunes which go astray is in reality a beauty sensed but not captured by the composition.
  • How it will lead our children astray from the Lord and make them hate God, Jesus, Mom, Dad, and Santa Clause.
  • Where I think Bryan goes astray is in making it seem as though the solution is to increase the power of elites.
  • Some have been led astray from the faith in their greed, and have pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
  • You shall stone him to death, because he sought to lead you astray from the Lord, your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, that place of slavery.
  • If you want to go astray from the topic, feel free to start your own blog, or get Prof. Volokh to make you a guest blogger on this one, and start a new thread.
  • So let us all muslims and non-muslims turn towards the only One Allah, otherwise many so called, “I-KNOW-EVERYTHING”, wise cracks will just talk, talk, talk, and take us astray from the right path.
  • Now that Providence had seen fit to cast him ashore, if he was to be permitted to continue his flight alone, he would go straight for his goal, the Swiss border, and not be led astray (that is what he called it, _led astray_) by any other enterprise.

Related Links

synonyms for astray
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