How To Use Bemuse In A Sentence

  • It bemuses me that I need a face-to-face situation in order to be able to construct my own argument without feeling overwhelmed.
  • While Mona stares uncomfortably into the horse's eye, Tamsin regards her with poised bemusement.
  • Aside from a few bemused looks from passers-by and a few words with the police, nothing untoward happened.
  • McElwee sees Los Angeles and its entertainment industry through the eyes of a bemused Easterner.
  • The young couple she confronted with this information today seemed bemused and uncertain how to react.
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  • We are confused, bemused and affronted. Times, Sunday Times
  • “Why wouldn’t it be?” he said, his expression morphing into bemusement. Nevermore
  • Mention "chinny" to Roach and he grins and shakes his head, bemused but also dismissive. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • The lights changed and the truck pulled off with Chase trying to keep his balance and looking thoroughly bemused.
  • Mr. Sebastian was looking at the boys with a bemused expression.
  • Myself, I spectated for a while out of the window, bemused and amused, an interloper at someone else's surprise party. Ballspenden
  • She seems unconcerned; only bemused. Times, Sunday Times
  • With so many brands and types of wine on the shelves, many bemused Scottish consumers plump for a bottle because the design on the label looks good.
  • Foreign darts fans are bemused. Times, Sunday Times
  • For better or worse, he became a master of the grand gesture, grappling with his inner demons and his outsize ego in front of a bemused public. Times, Sunday Times
  • Bemused onlookers were even more surprised when they saw central bankers dishing out free champagne and hot toddies to their shivering customers.
  • Not exactly a ringing endorsement for a deal that has bemused many in the City. Times, Sunday Times
  • Police were bemused when they found the bunny, which they dubbed Hoppy, on a roadside verge in Manchester and decided to take him into custody.
  • Still, American fascination with PMQs bemuses Britons. U.K. Election Turns to U.S. for Style
  • The painter exchanged a bemused look with his assistant, but agreed, quoted a price, and asked what subjects I would like him to paint.
  • Instead she spent time endlessly cleaning and polishing communal areas as bemused staff and residents looked on. The Sun
  • The room soon turned to bedlam as the voices of protest were countered by other delegates who argued that the debate should be allowed to continue, while other bemused bystanders tried to work out the plot.
  • Elderly people were bemused at the temporary closed sign as they turned up to collect their pension money only to find the shop shut.
  • There were few arguments at the award, just bemused looks. The Sun
  • A rather bemused declarer won trick two with the eight of clubs! Times, Sunday Times
  • Firefighters were bemused to wake up and find a large brown and white horse tethered by a rope to their station.
  • Our waiter is bemused by our request and allows us to use the tearoom for our photography session. A Glimpse
  • The sheer quantity of detail would bemuse even the most clear-headed author.
  • In cities such as Prague, expatriates were glued to televisions in bars, bemused locals looking on.
  • Bemused, she observed that even the horses drowsed quite steadily.
  • Evidence of this came two years ago when, to some bemusement, property prices began to play catch-up with less traumatised parts of the county.
  • Familiar bends and twists in the hallway lead her past cubbyholes and labs of other Engletech researchers, including the bemused Thatcher.
  • Scattering the soil across the bemused peccary, Neil uncovered the arms and face of the younger of the Swedish yachtsmen. RUSHING TO PARADISE
  • But he simply cocked one eyebrow, his expression bemused, and rubbed a hand gingerly over his jaw. The Devil Wears Plaid
  • It always bemuses me when people get upset about supercilious piffle like good manners but dont get upset about important things like radical islam, Neathergate, EUSSR, the mps expenses scandal. Tony Blair: The Next Labour Prime Minister?
  • Accordingly, of the subway bury difficult question, nobody dare clappers, bemused all the time decision - making process.
  • Instead she spent time endlessly cleaning and polishing communal areas as bemused staff and residents looked on. The Sun
  • I'm bemused by the continual croaking and moaning that goes on about budgets.
  • Passion, Sondheim's most operatic work, continues to baffle the ear and bemuse the mind.
  • He was also Carl Crook, an Anglo-Canadian teenager, and the middle aged businessman he has become – still living in China – looks back on his tumultuous youth now with an air of vague bemusement.
  • We are left bemused rather than shocked. Times, Sunday Times
  • Laurel is bemused by her husband's new-found enthusiasm for cricket and his frosty attitude towards the couple when she invites them to lunch. The Sun
  • I can only hope that his fee for letting me drop my marker and enjoy a story about a world and a demographic that confuses and bemuses me is higher than the fee for the pictures used to illustrate his informative — or should I say entertaining? — piece of journalism. Letters to the Editor
  • With a bemused shake of her head, she started to leave, when suddenly an idea struck her.
  • I particularly loved the businessman washing his hands and shaking his head in bemusement at the sticker in the mirror. Friday memes and random thoughts
  • He's still slightly bemused by the phenomenon. Times, Sunday Times
  • Imitating their elders on such occasions, they stuffed themselves with a lot of food and drink, and roared with merriment to the bemusement of all the diners around.
  • It might not mean much to the bemused passers-by, but in the sport of geocaching this little baby represents treasure.
  • Charles looked bemused but gave an encouraging smile while Emilia urged her on; Faith and Hope were smiling but Charity, Rebecca and Louisa were frowning.
  • One eyebrow is nearly obscured by the angle of her beret; the other is raised, bemused and disdainful.
  • Curiously, the footage of her performance on that day showed this audience not quite as keen - indeed, they stood stock-still and looked bemused.
  • Aiming for the fourth title of the season the local favourite netted a goal in each session, outplaying its bemused opponent.
  • I watched with bemusement as he dummied and juggled with the ball. Times, Sunday Times
  • Yesterday the couple stepped out into the brilliant afternoon sunshine to face the cameras, looking happy if somewhat bemused. Times, Sunday Times
  • a crowd of bemused onlookers
  • He was slightly bemused by his success. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Negative Ego is quite bemused by the concept of equality.
  • It means "daily bread," but somehow "quotidian" seems right for Seinfeld, 52, a guy whose entire career is built on his bemused study of everyday life. Jerry Seinfeld
  • From the sun lounger Maggie had been watching Liz conduct her hard sell with a kind of bemused indulgence. FALLEN WOMEN
  • When the first Icehotel in the world opened, some people were a little bemused by exactly what it was.
  • In cities such as Prague, expatriates were glued to televisions in bars, bemused locals looking on.
  • But, as befits the actor whose screen character is a smart but lairy chancer who finds himself out of his depth, Conlon is a bit bemused at his rising reputation.
  • The Negative Ego is quite bemused by the concept of equality.
  • Their pop sensibility, spangly make-up and subversiveness bemused, charmed and totally won me over.
  • The doctor seemed to contemplate this quite seriously, his fingers coming up to tap at his chin bemusedly.
  • You seem bemused, hurt, outraged. Times, Sunday Times
  • Make no mistake: this is the vitriol of a disillusioned fan, not a bemused outsider.
  • Chavvorth blew out the candle, his expression bemused, and put it down. Zeta Exchange A Terran Empire story
  • All of these things cause my brain befuddlement, bemusement and general confusion.
  • We now take a more cynical, or at least a more bemused, view of such analogistic reveries, for we recognize that the cosmos, in all its grandness, does not exist for us or as a mirror of our centrality in the scheme of universal things.
  • They camped out at a local garage rock band's house and played noisy, careening rhythms to a small number of bemused punks at the old Multipurpose Rumpus Room.
  • Signs are meant to inform and advise but some leave us bemused and amused. The Sun
  • Through the dry, chilling lines, he always seems one part bemused; you can almost hear a smirk in his voice, which is a deep, rich baritone, unbefitting of a 37-year-old who still half looks like a teenager.
  • Shop girls tend just to look pained and bemused when you ask if there are any trousers in stock that rise a bit higher, since they're oblivious to the exigencies of approaching middle age and the effects of gravity on untoned flesh.
  • Donovan looked at Jane inquisitively, a bemused grin on his round, ruddy Irish face. A Covert Affair
  • Instead she spent time endlessly cleaning and polishing communal areas as bemused staff and residents looked on. The Sun
  • This piece, which casts a bemused eye at love and rejection, gets points for much more than endearingness. Times, Sunday Times
  • Gattuso never let him rest on the ball, and delighted fans when he jinked past his bemused opponent.
  • Usually from the bemused skipper of a boat I'd just rammed. The Sun
  • He vacillates between childlike bemusement and childlike trepidation.
  • Not exactly a ringing endorsement for a deal that has bemused many in the City. Times, Sunday Times
  • Players who bemuse the opposition are exciting but those who confuse themselves as well can be simply glorious.
  • For myself I have also met up with people and been bemused about my lack of conversation.
  • The former England manager divides opinions in his homeland but the predominant emotions were sympathy and a degree of bemusement. Times, Sunday Times
  • I must admit that I was rather bemused by his sudden anger.
  • You seem bemused, hurt, outraged. Times, Sunday Times
  • Morris was contacted, and became increasingly bemused by the investigation.
  • With barely an apology, the bemused travelers were hustled off the train at Wellingborough and shovelled over the bridge to catch the next train south.
  • Usually from the bemused skipper of a boat I'd just rammed. The Sun
  • A handful of the migrants stood around the makeshift stage, looking a little bemused and somewhat put upon. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was clear that many viewed the famed incompetence of the modern English housewife and mother with bemusement. Times, Sunday Times
  • The sheer quantity of detail would bemuse even the most clear-headed author.
  • All of these things cause my brain befuddlement, bemusement and general confusion.
  • It was the bemused opal jaguar with a ruby butterfly resting on its golden claw. WHERE THE HEART IS
  • * Likewise, I was bemused by one of the later commenter’s insistence that I must’ve been raised in/rebelled against a quasi-libertarian fringe sect of Adventism, which is not at all the case. Randomness to let you know I’m still alive
  • Public bemusement with modern art is shared by Her Majesty, a new book has revealed.
  • A free kick 25 yards out perfectly placed and left the Derby defence bemused and helpless.
  • Now that he has, he does seem slightly bemused by it all. Times, Sunday Times
  • Probably weighing around 20 stone, a bald man with a moon face stood there, looking sad and bemused.
  • Sarah looked totally bemused.
  • Photographs of her, looking slightly uncomfortable and bemused before disembarking, achieved equal prominence.
  • He says that for most of his twenties his parents were bemused rather than anxious or intolerant. Times, Sunday Times
  • Asked to describe its colour, she replied ‘gosling green’, much to the bemusement of the locals.
  • He was totally bemused by the traffic system in the city.
  • He was the leading exponent of photorealism, a school of art that was probably maligned by the snoots but embraced, bemusedly, by the pop artists.
  • One takedown attempt came and went with the shrug of a Dos Santos shoulder, and UFC virgins were ultimately robbed of witnessing the ground game and grappling element to the sport, which often thrills and bemuses newcomers in equal measure. Elliot Worsell: While UFC Only Teases, Boxing Cheats
  • To his bemusement there was no chill, or else the chill was lost on him.
  • Once again this weekend, with a predictability that might be noteworthy were it not so dreadful, the country is busily tearing itself apart as the rest of the world looks on in agonised bemusement.
  • Given that local body elections are only 6 months away, the tempo was bound to increase, but I am still somewhat bemused at the ferocity of her attack and the level of her vitriol.
  • The man in the blue shirt and khaki shorts has a look of bemusement on his face. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is a decent sort, bemused by the essential strangeness of life, with more questions than answers.
  • With so many brands and types of wine on the shelves, many bemused Scottish consumers plump for a bottle because the design on the label looks good.
  • I left bemused, bewildered and even more interested in a region of complexities and complications.
  • The sheer quantity of detail would bemuse even the most clear-headed author.
  • Bemusement, uncertainty, insecurity, affliction are all tokens of an unremitting struggle; however stylish, the words are always about something, they are never in vacuo or for display.
  • Jan was bemused that few of the divers on our boat talked about what they had seen on the dive.
  • Has he observed the bemused punters viewing his exhibition? Times, Sunday Times
  • Bemused glances helped them get through that deadly sermon.
  • He was the leading exponent of photorealism, a school of art that was probably maligned by the snoots but embraced, bemusedly, by the pop artists.
  • obviously bemused by his questions
  • We have further the drunk being portrayed as a ruminator, albeit an intoxicated one, attempting to find a point of reference in the dilapidated territory of the Tenderloin, and these thought processes result in an act of bemused micturition. Vollmann’s Aesthetic Realism : Edward Champion’s Reluctant Habits
  • This they explained away with laconic bemusement, observing that the break occurred while moving a stubborn prisoner, and “the soldier concerned had placed the handguard against a VC head with considerable force.” The Gun
  • Then, before my hungry and bemused family could answer, he turned and vanished into the swirl of tables.
  • One bemused attender started to shout that he could not understand the answers to such questions.
  • After the show I ask him what he thought of the proceedings, and he says he was bemused by most of the criticism.
  • In France any mention of exercise tends to provoke a bemused reaction.
  • Has he observed the bemused punters viewing his exhibition? Times, Sunday Times
  • Aggressive linguistic subversiveness, which used to be his hallmark, has dwindled into charm; sheer amazement has become indistinct bemusement.
  • My rancher friend Lee, on whose ranch we do most of our hunting, came over to to me the other day at the Post Office, a bit bemused, to tell me to keep my dogs off his entirely "deeded", ie private acreage for the next couple of weeks, because the Government trappers were cleaning out coyotes there. Archive 2006-02-01
  • Those who recall Mercouri only as a mid-century sex symbol outshone by her more celebrated contemporaries Marilyn Monroe and Brigitte Bardot might be bemused by the exalted place she now occupies in the modern Greek pantheon, rather as if Angie Dickinson had become head of the National Endowment for the Arts. But more than anyone else, Mercouri vivified the continuing campaign to bring Greece's long-lost archaeological treasures back to their homeland. Grading the New Acropolis
  • The billboards advertising it that towered over the slums of Mumbai were met with bemusement and anger. Times, Sunday Times
  • This ebullient crime caper is the author's bemused look at the commodification of history.
  • It buys him first bemusement, then solicitation, and finally enmity and a serious whack upside the head.
  • She seems bemused by the attention. Times, Sunday Times
  • With alternating awe and bemusement, Paul watches as his entrepreneur wife multitasks, plunging herself into the center of whatever she touches - creating, re-creating, changing, improving.
  • Armstrong said: ‘I'm absolutely bemused that he decided to do something where he is not contactable by the people he represents or works for.’
  • The narratives tend to focus on family members left behind, in states of bemused and angry grief.
  • I was a bit bemused at the interview. Times, Sunday Times
  • Anyway, bemused etymologists eventually tracked down the source of this confusion.
  • They include a close, often bemused knowledge of one's fellow villagers, and linguistic expedients such as giving slighting nicknames, telling humorous anecdotes, and composing satirical ballads.
  • Scattering the soil across the bemused peccary, Neil uncovered the arms and face of the younger of the Swedish yachtsmen. RUSHING TO PARADISE
  • I remember being only slightly put off by all the walking that was required to get from parking lot to track, bemused by all the vendors selling anything from T-shirts to chicken wings, surprised at the sheer numbers of people who turned out to see un-mufflered vehicles go around in circles on an asphalt roadway. Outfoxed Diary Entry
  • Andy Rooney was America's bemused uncle, spouting homespun wisdom weekly at the end of "60 Minutes," a soupcon of topical relief after the news magazine's harder-hitting segments. Curmudgeonly Commentator Andy Rooney Dies
  • Day seems a little bemused by my question. Times, Sunday Times
  • Shoppers in Swindon were bemused to see snorkellers in the town centre.
  • Firefighters were bemused to wake up and find a large brown and white horse tethered by a rope to their station.
  • This was a contest that will be remembered as the day the Saints became bemused sinners.
  • Meanwhile the project seems to have provoked some bemused commentary among art connoisseurs.
  • Kildare Town residents were bemused when a statue of Lord Edward Fitzgerald appeared in Market Square recently as if he appeared by magic or as if aliens had beamed him down.
  • as distant and bemused as a professor listening to the prattling of his freshman class
  • Hi tanna, it's really a Melbourne institution, though it's not for everybody, there is the odd bemused face. At My Table
  • The Negative Ego is quite bemused by the concept of equality.
  • Eleanor slowly pulls the acquiescently bemused Gary into her life, whether it's her remorse at selling her classic car or her need for some simple body contact, in the form of asexual cuddling. Marshall Fine: HuffPost Review: Hello Lonesome
  • The counterperson seemed shyly bemused by the fact someone had heard of the promotion. DOUBLE FREE FOOD ALERT | Midtown Lunch - Finding Lunch in the Food Wasteland of NYC's Midtown Manhattan
  • Shoppers bustled by, some with the full set of designer carrier bags, others with only a bemused frown.
  • Now, I suspect that most of us read this anecdote with a somewhat bemused attitude at the daring of the vicar for having asked something so time-consuming of his bishop.
  • Mind you, I was a little bemused to read the article say: ‘Is my peripheral vision good enough to detect back-stabbing?’
  • He took the offered hand and shook it firmly, bemused by the looks Mrs. Davis was giving him.
  • The outburst caused some bemusement, because at least three of his opponents are frontline politicians. Times, Sunday Times
  • The vocals are supported by guitar, violin and keyboard and, of course, the occasional handclaps, providing an up-beat, cheery backing to the shopping of Argos customers (who pass by with looks of bemusement).
  • Great White Snark entertains and bemuses with coverage of geeky curiosities from around the Web. MIND MELD: What Are The Most Realistic (and the Most Ridiculous) Uses of Science in SciFi Film and TV?
  • Her bemusement wasn't based on the objectification of women or any perceived sexism - she thinks my male friends and I are too posh, too nice, to use such "laddish" terms. The Guardian World News
  • I think we were a bit bemused initially as it was essentially just a demo. The Sun
  • Bligh felt bemused, standing in this trench with its perfectly revetted walls and neat dug-out bunkers.
  • Twice the fish is close, the tuna boat far behind, bemused fishermen watching our manoeuvres with some trepidation.
  • Unfortunately, what Cecil offers seems little better - it's little more than an episodic series of hammily acted altercations between his shrill cast and various bemused multiplex employees and film producers.
  • He was rather bemused by children.
  • She looked a little bemused to see me but immediately unslung her bag from her shoulder and swung it towards me.
  • My family were slightly bemused, although my father was delighted. Times, Sunday Times
  • The production bemused and beguiled a packed house in which I seemed to be the only person over 22.
  • The top brass of Iran's navy saluted thousands of bemused onlookers from the tiny fibreglass boat attached to a lorry. The Sun
  • In total bemusement, Peter stood before one, then another, and another of the unframed canvases that circled the walls. SOMETHING IN THE WATER
  • He looked utterly bemused by the question, shook his head and smiled broadly.
  • The station, made famous in the eponymous Oscar-nominated film, was filled with grizzled old men in rakish Panama hats, young Turks in Bermuda shorts and T-shirts, and besuited and bemused commuters.
  • The language, mental and nuanced — like the prose structure itself — often serves a bemusedly ironic sensibility; life is more spectated than suffered. These Kids Today
  • This discomfited some of the Zuccotti inhabitants, aware of anti-Semitism charges against the movement, so an OWSer in an undershirt and porkpie hat poured coffee down the guy's back, who called out to demand his constitutional rights from a bemused-looking senior NYPD official. Squatting on Wall Street
  • As bemused commuters hurried by, small chanting groups poured out from the early morning bars.
  • When I got there, the Fool was bemusedly turning his posy in his. THE GOLDEN FOOL: BOOK TWO OF THE TAWNY MAN
  • He seems bemused by his new surroundings goats, geese, Shetland ponies and a variety of other animals.
  • The pupil gave me a rather bemused look before saying he had been last night and preferred their pizzas. Times, Sunday Times
  • The name caused a lot of bemusement, but over the course of his life Dryfess obligingly chose to respond to several different variations of it.
  • This lone polar bear bemused tourists on a cruise through Svalbard in the Arctic by standing on its hind legs and appearing to wave. Times, Sunday Times
  • When the first Icehotel in the world opened, some people were a little bemused by exactly what it was.
  • Sometimes when I look back on my life as a child or young adolescent, it is through the eyes of a bemused observer.
  • One ashen-faced senior figure said: ‘We are standing around here bemused and astonished.’
  • It seems to a bemused outsider at times as if the country must have its own cultural variant of masochistic puritanism, a collective desire for the penitential abnegation of prosperity and all its works.
  • She gushed while Sol just looked at me with a bemused expression and raised one shoulder in a short shrug.
  • “I needed to use the restroom, so I thought I should buy something,” he replied, his expression bemused. The Glass Rainbow
  • ‘I'm utterly mystified,’ said one bemused spokesman earlier today.
  • You wondered for a moment who was most bemused by this monumental and possibly decisive swing of the pendulum.
  • The pews were no longer haphazard and broken, instead they now were arranged in neat rows leading up to the front, where a bemused Tane and a fully clothed Ferik sat.
  • The strange songs he would sing during his morning shower were a constant source of bemusement to all who had the luxury of hearing his rhapsody.
  • One eyebrow is nearly obscured by the angle of her beret; the other is raised, bemused and disdainful.
  • As they watched in bemusement she reached sand and promptly sank ankle-deep, wobbling precariously, grabbing at air for support, her balance an uncertainty from moment to moment.
  • He is still bemused by the enigmatic arrival and departure of his illness.
  • When the selectors were bussed to the Kelvin Hall in a Strathclyde double decker, they were a mite bemused to find the arena dominated by circus elephants limbering up for their annual Christmas gig.
  • The driver examined the surreal scene with an expression of bemused wonder. Flash
  • Ian looked again, then turned toward Alice with an expression halfway between skepticism and bemusement. Here Comes Another Lesson
  • That was the bemused phrase people employed to explain the always weird, sometimes amusing, often maddening behavior of Manny Ramirez, the slugger who retired last week.
  • In the centre of it all stands a bemused young Fijian, a pair of lifebelts extending from outstretched arms, being a tree.

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