mislore means evil teaching or counsel; wrong or false teaching; misinformation. Lexicurio rates it Rare gem — a strength score of 82 out of 100.
Why “mislore” is a great word
MISLORE — [Noun] Evil or false teaching; corrupt doctrine or malevolent counsel. From Middle English mislore, from Old English mislār ("ill teaching, evil suggestion"), equivalent to the prefix mis- ("badly, wrongly") + lore ("teaching, doctrine"). Unlike "heresy," which denotes a specific deviation from orthodox dogma, or "misinformation," a clinical term for factual error, mislore is the ancient poison in the well of wisdom. It is the whispered counsel that leads a kingdom to ruin, the corrupted text in a sacred library, the charming lie passed from mentor to pupil—a betrayal not merely of truth, but of the very covenant of learning, a shackle forged from tradition.
Etymology
From Middle English mislore, from Old English mislār (“ill teaching, evil suggestion”), equivalent to mis- + lore.
noun
- Evil teaching or counsel; wrong or false teaching; misinformation.“Then if both we and such as we will Rome-shape Our own mislore, the whole great world of Christians In oneness with the headship of Rome's Pontiff, May, with a crushing force against outsiders, Await with him in joy Christ's second coming.”