Looks like the President-Elect needs "unpresidented" home schooling to help his spellings. At least we know he types his own tweets!!!! https://t.co/7Vg2CVuKSA



— Omar Abdullah (@abdullah_omar) December 17, 2016

A lot of Americans are probably wishing they could unpresident @realDonaldTrump right about now #unpresidented



— Omar Abdullah (@abdullah_omar) December 17, 2016

#unpresidented You demanded Obama's birth certificate, I in return demand written proof you passed 3rd grade.



— Terence Digan (@TerenceDigan1) December 17, 2016

Trump isn't wrong, he just discovered a word no one has used yet. He's calling dictionary companies and coercing them. #unpresidented



— Joseph Geran III (@Joe_GeranIII) December 17, 2016

Trump knows words, he has the best words. #Unpresidented



— M.Steiner (@ShatteredStar97) December 17, 2016

China steals United States Navy research drone in international waters - rips it out of water and takes it to China in unprecedented act.



— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 17, 2016

Inputs from AP

NEW DELHI: US President-elect Donald Trump today misspelled 'unprecedented' as 'unpresidented,' in a tweet on China seizing an unmanned US Navy drone in the South China Sea .Although he later published a corrected version of his tweet, his gaffe inspired several Twitter users - including former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah - to use the hashtag #unpresidented to mock him.Here's Trump's original tweet.And here are the puns Omar Abdullah promptly came up with at Trump's expense.The ex-Jammu and Kashmir CM wasn't alone in poking fun at the US President-elect.This jibe mocks something Trump actually said during his election campaign.This isn't the first time Trump has misspelled a word in a tweet. Last week, he misspelled ridiculous as 'rediculous' in a tweet in which he alleged that the American news channel CNN was reporting fake news, AP reported.Today, hundreds of new tweets inundated the #unpresidented hastag page before Trump could publish a corrected tweet.China today said it seized the drone to guarantee the "safe navigation of passing ships," and that it had "decided to transfer it to the U.S. through appropriate means," the AP report said.Yesterday, the Pentagon said in a statement that China had "unlawfully seized" a US Navy drone - an unmanned underwater vehicle or UUV - on December 15, and asked China to return it immediately.