Misleading in a sentence as an adjective

The title of this link is very misleading.

I'm not even sure what's going on, but it's incredibly misleading.

>have our world maps been wrong or misleading for 500 years?No, they were just used mainly for navigation.

Definitely a misleading title and kind of unfair to Rackspace.

Musk said afterward in a Twitter post: “Rockets are tricky.”"Am I the only one who finds this a bit misleading?

I think the headline of the article is pretty misleading as he means that Windows 8 is a catastrophe for Steam because of the Windows 8 app store.

These people should be in prison for malevolently misleading the public in order to start a for-profit war which killed hundreds of thousands of people.

They cherry picked quotes, out of context and attempted to create confusion in any readers, with the intention of misleading them as to the judges present ruling.

Here are some other reasons:1- WiFi drains battery fast, therefore advertising instant WiFi unlocking was foolish, if not purposefully misleading from the beginning.

Misleading definitions

adjective

designed to deceive or mislead either deliberately or inadvertently; "the deceptive calm in the eye of the storm"; "deliberately deceptive packaging"; "a misleading similarity"; "statistics can be presented in ways that are misleading"; "shoddy business practices"

See also: deceptive shoddy