miss the mark

miss the mark

To be slightly or somewhat mistaken, incorrect, or inaccurate. I believe your statements about the city's homelessness problem have rather missed the mark. The film tries to be a commentary on the middle class in this country, but it ends up missing the mark.
See also: mark, miss
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

ˌhit/ˌmiss the ˈmark

succeed/fail in achieving or guessing something: He blushed furiously and Robyn knew she had hit the mark.
See also: hit, mark, miss
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
See also:
  • begging your pardon, but (something)
  • off beam
  • off the beam
  • on the beam
  • I beg your pardon, but (something)
  • beg your pardon, but
  • way off base
  • off base
  • way off
  • Get real!
References in periodicals archive
But these comments miss the mark, says Kimmel-Hankoff.
First, the authors miss the mark when it comes to beneficial use realities.
More importantly, the programme questions why, more often than not, the official football songs always miss the mark and asks who is responsible for starting the chants which echo across the nation's terraces.
These initiatives are directionally sensible, but often miss the mark. We believe that in designing a company policy to make outside directors owners, four main considerations should come to mind.
Some of the findings concerning the way journalists miss the mark on guns may be familiar.
`That's where I think an income tax in Wyoming would miss the mark....
Unfortunately, many of these presentations miss the mark because the way they present the information is confusing or boring or they carry hidden sales pitches.
Nevertheless, they must constantly strive for perfection and be held accountable to the appropriate extent when they miss the mark. Only then will the art of civility become a beacon for leading policing into the future.
They use stories, tales, fables, and poems as the method, but both books miss the mark as real guides for moral education.
Jacob Weisberg has written a brisk and convincing account of the shifting fortunes of "government" from Madison to Gingrich, and its argument is eminently reasonable: that a smart, activist government is essential, and that the typical conservative pose ("let's cut everything") and the liberal retort ("don't cut anything" miss the mark. It is a predictable case, and that's not a criticism.
hamartia Greek hamartia error, fault, a derivative of hamartanein to miss the mark, err
Yet, traditional methods aimed at getting teens to see the light usually miss the mark.