Sincerity is also opposed to flattery, which tends to give a man a false impression of our opinion, and of our feelings towards him, and likewise leads him to form a false estimate of his own character.
It is consequently opposed to all those methods by which either a false statement may be made to assume the appearance of truth, or one essentially true may be so related as to convey a false impression.
XXII It is difficult not to convey a false impressionof Margaret at this time.
And this is the reason why extreme, unrelieved realism is apt to give a false impressionof persons and scenes.
But I must be careful not to give a false impression.
Further than that, there are one or two things which, if unsaid, would undoubtedly give a false impression of the writer of this book.
Make sure that the specimen bricks you select for quotation do not give a false impressionof the facade, and not only of the elevation merely, but of the perspective also, and of the ground-plan.
This statement, while it affirms an important fact, gives a false impression as regards Dr.
He says that I have "skilfully conveyed a false impression" by giving certain German figures in hundredweights and English figures in tons.
And this is the man who sprinkles around charges of "misrepresentation," and of having "skilfully conveyed a false impression"!
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "false impression" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.