Astray in a sentence as an adverb

When I've applied the things he's written, more often than not, they've lead me astray.

But: if you want to explore the concept a little, Bing goes astray and Google does not.

Bigger question: how many people have been led astray by this pied piper of the globalized/information age?

When markets go astray the answer is not to make the taxpayer step in once more, but to introduce better regulation.

They write unprofessional articles and create deceiving videos to lead people astray...

Natural law is one of those tenured ideas that we always rediscover or reinvent when our statute laws start going too far astray.

How is it possible that we have gone so far astray that we are slaughtering as many people as someone we vilify as part of the "axis of evil"?

This is about the leadership of the country gone morally astray, and not caring about who sees it.> Russia has problems everyone knows that, ...Oh well, that's allright then.

Isn't it great that there are multiple separate, public, open channels to provide feedback when the police go astray?The use of "cannot" here is very problematic.

They alone, if well informed, are capable of preventing the corruption of power, and of restoring the nation to its rightful course if it should go astray.

Think you meant "when an angel investor with a big mouth and no taste like 500 Startups puts money into..."regardless, we don't shy away from helping our founders, even should they go astray.

Everything that Lennart Poettering has ever done was an unreliable clusterfuck[1] astray from the Unix philosphy.

How dare someone like Bradley Manning stand up for the people, how dare he stand up for the truth... If the Government are killing innocent people and leading the public astray unless they tell us, we don't have the right to know the truth, right?

"And the conclusion where the author warns about being led astray on the journey: "Between the time that I left Facebook and the time I joined Pixlee, I received a literal metric fuckton of advice, from respectable, well-meaning, intelligent people.

Kipling put it well: It is wrong to put temptation in the path of any nation, For fear they should succumb and go astray; So when you are requested to pay up or be molested, You will find it better policy to say: -- "We never pay any-one Dane-geld, No matter how trifling the cost; For the end of that game is oppression and shame, And the nation that pays it is lost!

Astray definitions

adverb

away from the right path or direction; "he was led astray"

adverb

far from the intended target; "the arrow went wide of the mark"; "a bullet went astray and killed a bystander"

See also: wide