How To Use Confound In A Sentence

  • The term "gentilhomme" is so liable to be confounded with "gentleman" that it needs explaining, for, despite the similarity of derivation, no two words can be more distinct. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 17, No. 097, January, 1876
  • [42] Of such ministers and counselors, the holy king said that they who were confounded and ashamed should remove themselves far from him: _Avertantur statim erubescentes, qui dicunt mihi, "Euge, euge! The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 — Volume 25 of 55 1635-36 Explorations by Early Navigators, Descriptions of the Islands and Their Peoples, Their History and Records of the Catholic Missions, As Related in Contemporaneous Books and Manuscripts, Showing t
  • These analyses depend on a number of potentially confounding factors such as nonstomatal transpiration and temperature.
  • Thus residual confounding could not be completely excluded, and the findings could not assign causality.
  • Where the god and the idolon were most nearly one there was least danger of confounding them. Surprised by Joy
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  • On one occasion, in hospital after an operation, Pegg awoke from his anaesthetically induced coma an hour too early, confounding doctors until it was realised he must have overheard a fellow patient on the ward watching The Guardian World News
  • So again like a good politician I shall try to tailor my ideology to make it sound more attuned to a reality that surprises and confounds me.
  • Why have those early predictions been confounded? Times, Sunday Times
  • But though this darkness were wholly removed, there is another darkness, that ariseth not from the want of light, but from the excessive superabundance of light — _caligo lucis nimiæ_, (240) that is, a divine darkness, a darkness of glory, such an infinite excess and superplus of light and glory, above all created capacities, that it dazzles and confounds all mortal or created understandings. The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning
  • The 3, 000 lives killed heinously, and his mis-reading of Islam confound Shia and Sunni.
  • Placed there to confront and confound him.
  • To unscrew the casing is to throw open such a Pandora's Box of nuts and springs, axles, ratchets and governors as to confound all attempts to recapture them.
  • But I will say, as you shall see, that he matched their subtlety with equal subtlety; and from what I saw of him I have little doubt but what he would have confounded many a disputant in the synagogues. Chapter 17
  • One explanation for these differences is confounding by poorly measured or unmeasured risk factors that varied between communities.
  • He could also be volatile, pettish and confounding.
  • The first was entitled: "_Refutatio Samaritani Interim_, in quo vera religio cum sectis et corruptelis scelerate et perniciose confunditur -- Refutation of the Samaritan Interim, in which the true religion is criminally and perniciously confounded with the sects. Historical Introductions to the Symbolical Books of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
  • The result of this admixture of the real and the unreal is confusion thrice confounded. The Somnambulists
  • They cried unto thee, and were delivered: they trusted in thee, and were not confounded.
  • He said that the expectation and excitement prompted by the Jubilee across the nation has confounded the cynics.
  • We should not confound uncharity with a sort of natural repugnance and antipathy, instinctive to some natures, betraying a weakness of character, if you will, but hardly what one could call a clearly defined fault. Explanation of Catholic Morals A Concise, Reasoned, and Popular Exposition of Catholic Morals
  • As far as skulls are concerned, there is one confounding variable: climate.
  • Pillow and blanket, in size befitting that missing infant, made that black perambulator all the more confounding.
  • We all know it when we see it but teachers and politicians have found it confoundingly hard to reproduce. Times, Sunday Times
  • Logistic regression models were used to determine which variables significantly and independently could predict bacterial pneumonia and to adjust for potential confounders.
  • So wonderfull are these thoughts that my spirit failes in me at the consideration thereof; and I am confounded to think that God, who hath done so much for me should have so little from me. Anne Bradstreet and Her Time
  • Consideration of how straight- and contracting-stemmed points might have been hafted is initially confounding.
  • They confuse and they confound. Times, Sunday Times
  • The scale and pace of technological progress continues to confound predictions. Basic Marketing. Principles and Practice
  • So lonesome that there were times when life looked absolutely worthless; when the blue devils made him their plaything, and he saw Billy Louise looking scornfully upon him and loving some other man better; when he saw his name blackened by the suspicion that he was a rustler -- preying upon his neighbors 'cattle; when he saw Buck Olney laughing in derision of his mercy and fixing fresh evidence against him to confound him utterly. The Ranch at the Wolverine
  • The NY Times' Haggler column tackled the confounding process of buying mattresses recently, with the help of Consumer Reports, which stated plainly: "Shopping for a mattress can be a nightmare.
  • Liza and Art gave each other a look of mutual confoundment, then Liza joined her husband on the carpeted stairs. The Good House
  • A solemn anathema is pronounced against Nestorius and Eutyches; against all heretics by whom Christ is divided, or confounded, or reduced to a phantom. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • The truth is, that our friend had been reading among the essays of a contemporary, who has perversely been confounded with him, a paper in which Edax (or the Great Eater) humorously complaineth of an inordinate appetite; and it struck him that a better paper -- of deeper interest, and wider usefulness -- might be made out of the imagined experiences of a The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 67, May, 1863
  • Gentlewoman — query — If I am confoundedly violent who never use violence in private or public — what are the Demagogues — the Consuls the Letter 130
  • DOBBS: It's remarkable that this -- whatever confusion, or confoundment over 7,000 cases, they actually keep a registry of cases of leprosy. CNN Transcript May 7, 2007
  • Partnerships are a radical intervention in a world stuck with its past(Sentence dictionary), confounded by its present and fearful of its future.
  • The non-identity of hypostasis and ousia is, I take it, suggested even by our western brethren, where, from a suspicion of the inadequacy of their own language, they have given the word ousia in the Greek, to the end that any possible difference of meaning might be preserved in the clear and unconfounded distinction of terms. NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works
  • If we think of the average 18th-century male as being a condescending misogynist, then this man confounds our expectations.
  • The Arians were accused of confounding personal attributes (like, say, the unbegottenness of the Father alone) with natural attributes (like, say, the uncreatedness of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit alike). Energetic Procession
  • His amazing recovery confounded the medical specialists.
  • Conclusions- Increasing waist-hip ratio is negatively associated with the probability of conception per cycle, before and after adjustment for confounding factors.
  • As participation in challenge testing at all time points was voluntary, self-selection was a possible confounder.
  • The barked torrent of words flowed over me: a cataract of verbiage with unknown phrases sticking up like sharp rocks to confound the frail barque of my self-confidence and perhaps overwhelm it.
  • For a second time, he had been forced to confound the rules that said his should be an arm's-length role. THE LAST TEMPTATION
  • Gangs of criminals are confounding expectations by helping to reduce the fear of crime through making their neighbourhoods a safer place.
  • An elderly man from Hull has confounded doctors by recovering after he was officially declared dead.
  • The Hummer and the Mini by Robyn WatersAs the two iconic machines in the title suggest, the products that succeed in our polarized age can confound the expectations of even the savviest marketers. Quick Read
  • So to confound sceptics, this week offers two outstanding dramas. Times, Sunday Times
  • However, this relationship is confounded by the effect of age; disability increases with age, as does dementia.
  • Danish brides and grooms used to confound the evil spirits by cross-dressing.
  • The sudden rise in share prices has confounded economists.
  • _ -- In this kind of paraphasia in adults the cause is a lack of attention; therefore purely central concentration is wanting, or one fails to "collect himself"; there is distraction, hence the unintentional, frequently unconscious, confounding of words similar in sound or connected merely by remote, often dim, reminiscences. The Mind of the Child, Part II The Development of the Intellect, International Education Series Edited By William T. Harris, Volume IX.
  • He momentarily confounded his critics by his cool handling of the hostage crisis.
  • Confound the nyctalopia!” said Paganel, inwardly, though delighted to be of any service to his friend. In Search of the Castaways
  • China's foreign trade figures confounded expectations last month as exports from the country grew for the first time in nine months. Times, Sunday Times
  • They confound our sense of what is right and fitting. Times, Sunday Times
  • The close correlation between the data obtained from these two sources suggests that recall error is unlikely to be a confounding factor.
  • Logistic regression models were used to determine which variables significantly and independently could predict bacterial pneumonia and to adjust for potential confounders.
  • Their comprehensive defeat was confounded even further yesterday when they visited Yorkshire Academy in the League Cup quarter-finals.
  • Dutch brick went round the world as ballast in trading ships, confounding its origins as a local, geologically dependent material.
  • Making comparisons between brains is a very risky business because there are confounding variables to confuse the issue.
  • Why was she being so confoundedly stubborn about not abandoning him?
  • They confound our sense of what is right and fitting. Times, Sunday Times
  • Roman empire! how countless the nations which swarm forth, in mingling and indistinct hordes, constantly changing the geographical limits — incessantly confounding the natural boundaries! The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Play both, and the laughs of confounded expectation will follow. Times, Sunday Times
  • In this population, socially advantaged men perceived themselves to be most stressed, leading to a confounded association between higher stress and better health.
  • It must not, however, be confounded with greed, which is the most immediate meaning of the Latin word avaritia. On Human Nature
  • Faith, yes, to be put to the arbitrement of swords, and by such two that would by all likelihood have confounded one the other, or have fallen both. Act I. Scene IV. Cymbeline
  • The sudden rise in share prices has confounded economists.
  • _mitra_, and [Greek: tiara], Lat. _tiara_, to designate two different kinds of covering for the head in use amongst the Oriental races, each one of a distinct and peculiar form, though as being foreigners, and consequently not possessing the technical accuracy of a native, they not unfrequently confound the two words, and apply them indiscriminately to both objects. Notes and Queries, Number 69, February 22, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
  • Making comparisons between brains is a very risky business because there are confounding variables to confuse the issue.
  • She be-knaved, be-rascalled, be-rogued the unhappy hero, who stood silent, confounded with astonishment, but more with shame and indignation, at being thus outwitted and overreached. The History of the Life of the Late Mr Jonathan Wild the Great
  • Confound it, Napier - he's a brave man ... and I'll own that if he could reach Campbell his knowledge of the byways of Lucknow would be beyond price - but he's harder to disguise than ... damme, than any man in this garrison. Fiancée
  • Then this confounded stinkpot of a bombshell burst in our midst. Lalage's Lovers
  • It has much general resemblance to the manatee or lamantin of the West Indies, and has been confounded with it; but the distinction between them has been ascertained by M. Cuvier, Annales du M.seum d'Histoire Naturelle 22 cahier page 308. The History of Sumatra Containing An Account Of The Government, Laws, Customs And Manners Of The Native Inhabitants
  • If the spacecraft, after running out of maneuvering fuel, should crash into Europa, it might contaminate that moon with stowaway microbes from Earth and confound future searchers for indigenous life.
  • Avp expression were not accompanied by changes in V1a and V1b receptors that could confound the analysis of the behavioral involvement of AVP in these lines. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • It also offered the benefit of controlling for potential confounding effects of conglomerate firms.
  • I'm still confounded by how some of you manage to work full time and blog!
  • 'Ay, and have reason to know her,' said the jockey, putting his hand into his left waistcoat-pocket, as if to feel for something, 'for she gave me what I believe few men could do -- a most confounded wapping. The Romany Rye A Sequel to 'Lavengro'
  • I saw in him, with a keen longing, those features characteristic of the Guermantes, of that race which had remained so individual in the midst of a world with which it was not confounded, in which it remained isolated in the glory of an ornithomorphic divinity, for it seemed to have been the issue, in the age of mythology, of the union of a goddess with a bird. The Guermantes Way
  • But its office must not be confounded with that attributed to the sinister-looking scaur of Leucadia; here the erring wives of the Kings of Boma and their paramours found a Bosphorus. Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo
  • But these terms are often confounded and are taken one for the other. Sources of the West: Readings in Western Civilization, Volume 1: From the Beginning to 1715
  • Oil prices have often confounded economic forecasters. Times, Sunday Times
  • In hospital visiting don't charge in, make lots of noise and generally be a confounded nuisance. Fools Rush In - A Call to Christian Clowning
  • Such crimes would have deserved the animadversion of the magistrate; but in this promiscuous outrage, the innocent were confounded with the guilty, and Alexandria was impoverished by the loss of a wealthy and industrious colony.
  • Murray Bradshaw was surprised and confounded at the easy way in which she received his compliments, and played with his advances, after the fashion of the trained ball-room belles, who know how to be almost caressing in manner, and yet are really as far off from the deluded victim of their suavities as the topmost statue of the Milan cathedral from the peasant that kneels on its floor. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 118, August, 1867
  • He was to preach the doctrines, and I was to confound all opponents.
  • Wherefore, as Origen had carefully compared the Greek version of the Septuagint with the Hebrew text; and as he puzzled and confounded the learned Jews, by urging upon them the reading "to death" in this place; it seems almost impossible not to conclude, both from Origen's argument and the silence of his Jewish adversaries, that the Hebrew text at that time actually had the word agreeably to the version of the seventy. Evidence of Christianity
  • It is a confoundyous injective so to say, Shaun the fiery boy shouted, naturally incensed, as he shook the red pepper out of his auricles. Finnegans Wake
  • And ultimately, he would say, I'm confoundedly depressed. Get Briefed: Ron Baron
  • As the possibility of critical engagement hangs in the balance, he sits at the bar, unvanquished, formulating the next, undoubtedly entertaining, undoubtedly confounding, postproduction for our consumption.
  • He won gold and then confounded the cynics beating the top two Americans within the next couple of weeks.
  • Although somewhat quiet with just 13 shots, as the Nets used more double-teams, he again confounded them with his patient, intelligent play. USATODAY.com
  • The small sample size was obviously a confounding factor in interpreting the results.
  • Tower, who died in 1315, and who has always been confounded with the fabulous Guy: and if it has disappeared, we have to regret the loss of the only specimen of an English bascinet of that period that I am aware of in this country. Notes and Queries, Number 46, September 14, 1850
  • He confounded all opinion polls by coming second in the presidential elections, as a result of which he entered the run-off elections against him.
  • So that, I think, when we talk of division of bodies in infinitum, our idea of their distinct bulks, which is the subject and foundation of division, comes, after a little progression, to be confounded, and almost lost in obscurity. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
  • Then came forward the Persian sage and, prostrating himself before the King, presented him with a horse5 of the blackest ebony-wood inlaid with gold and jewels, and ready harnessed with saddle, bridle and stirrups such as befit Kings; which when Sabur saw, he marvelled with exceeding marvel and was confounded at the beauty of its form and the ingenuity of its fashion. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • His amazing recovery confounded the medical specialists.
  • The only nervous affections with which it could possibly be confounded are chorea and paralysis agitans. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
  • When I say \ "bestseller\" I mean major lists: New York Times, Wall Street Journal, et al. Still, even after numerous books and a variety of lists, the \ "list\" itself still confounded me, so I decided to do a little research to find out what it really takes to hit a list. Penny C. Sansevieri: From Book to Bestseller: What It Takes To Crack The List (And Why You Might Not Want To)
  • He fails completely, of course, but with his attempts to confound and wrong-foot audiences more used to linear stories, it is a noble failure.
  • He has inspired imitators, tolerated plagiarists and confounded the computer geeks who try in vain to turn his craft into software.
  • Instead what you get is something inventive and of the moment - they play tunes from their CD's, but they also like mixing stuff up and confounding expectations.
  • Poore Isabella, confounded with feare and shame, as being no way able to excuse her fault, knew not what answer to make, but standing silent, made her case compassionable to all the rest, even those hard-hearted Sisters which betrayed her. The Decameron
  • It implies a confusion of ideas, confounding physical power which is almighty, and moral power, which is suasory and resistible. The Doctrines of Predestination, Reprobation, and Election
  • This difference was significant, even in the rigorous statistical analysis for the cluster level design, controlling for confounding variables.
  • The huge system of the trades is, for some reason, quite confounded by this multiplicity of reefs, the wind intermits, squalls are frequent from the west and south-west, hurricanes are known. In the South Seas
  • No. It can scarcely be confounded with milium, as in this latter disease the lesion has no open outlet, no black point, and the contents cannot be squeezed out. Essentials of Diseases of the Skin Including the Syphilodermata Arranged in the Form of Questions and Answers Prepared Especially for Students of Medicine
  • These views must not, therefore, be confounded with what is commonly termed the telluric or atmospheric origin of meteoric stones, nor yet with the singular opinion of Aristotle, which supposed the enormous mass of ®gos COSMOS: A Sketch of the Physical Description of the Universe, Vol. 1
  • I was equally confounded by the metaphors of this tome.
  • We reduced confounding variables by using a randomised crossover trial and the same browser for searching both schemes.
  • Mind you, sometimes, now and again, Nature confounds us by letting an early break of fair skies extend itself a little, hover on the cusp of change and then, once the weather men are completely confused, settle in for a long hot summer.
  • There are remarkable few studies of animal sex unconfounded by Puritanism. Frans de Waal: Fellating Female Fruit Bats
  • As such, he confounds modern-day screamers on both the left and the right for whom the warrior code is unintelligible.
  • All this beneath a canopy of sulphur and a bedlam of sounds, like confusion confounded.
  • His amazing recovery confounded the medical specialists.
  • This amazing, confounding, admirable, amiable beauty, [4817] than which in all nature's treasure (saith Isocrates) there is nothing so majestical and sacred, nothing so divine, lovely, precious, Anatomy of Melancholy
  • “I thought not, — I meant not,” said she, more and more confounded, “to submit to any indignity, though my pride, in an exigence so peculiar, may give way, for a while, to convenience.” Cecilia
  • He's absolutely incredulous about my becoming a pastor, as if it has confounded his tactics against my authority as his father and given me some extra power he is not prepared to contend with…
  • They seem to be very like that theism or natural religion, which Christians profess to confound with atheism or irreligion which is their exact opposite. Emile
  • Hamath is confounded -- at the tidings of the overthrow of the neighboring Damascus. on the sea -- that is, at the sea; the dwellers there are alarmed. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • Not that maximal rigor is needed to establish your basic point here, but nowadays such allometric comparisons are typically done by regressing the variable that you are interested in (brain size) on the confounding variable (body size) and then examining the residuals instead of looking purely at proportions. Fun with hominin brain size as a percentage of body mass - The Panda's Thumb
  • For a second time, he had been forced to confound the rules that said his should be an arm's-length role. THE LAST TEMPTATION
  • I observe that the physicians in this country pay no regard to the state of the solids in chronical disorders, that exercise and the cold bath are never prescribed, that they seem to think the scurvy is entirely an English disease; and that, in all appearance, they often confound the symptoms of it, with those of the venereal distemper. Travels through France and Italy
  • Further, when the design is one of unusual breadth, as in some symphonic movements, or in elaborate chamber music, the number of fundamental thematic members may be so multiplied that it is necessary to assume the presence of _two successive Subordinate themes_, of equal independent significance, -- such significance that neither of them could be confounded with a mere codetta, or any other inferior thematic member. Lessons in Music Form A Manual of Analysis of All the Structural Factors and Designs Employed in Musical Composition
  • You shall go to the theatre if you want to," he remarked at last, in that sweet, protecting way peculiar to his class from the habitual confounding of _can, shall_ and _will_, and that put us into good humor directly. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 15, No. 85, January, 1875
  • Some of the merchants were drowned and others made shift to reach the shore and save themselves upon the mountain; I amongst the number, and when we got ashore, we found a great island, or rather peninsula72 whose base was strewn with wreckage of crafts and goods and gear cast up by the sea from broken ships whose passengers had been drowned; and the quantity confounded compt and calculation. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • We were not able to adjust for the possible confounding effect of body weight as this information has not been collected.
  • Among a giddy and light-minded people, they have appropriated to themselves the post of honour of pedantry: they confound the levity of jocularity, which is quite compatible with profundity in art, with the levity of shallowness, which (as a natural gift or natural defect,) is so frequent among their countrymen. Lectures on Dramatic Art and Literature
  • Logistic regression models were used to determine which variables significantly and independently could predict bacterial pneumonia and to adjust for potential confounders.
  • In particular, national desires to shift from import-replacing investments to export-creating ones may be confounded by administrative impossibility.
  • Potential confounding by parental educational status, parental smoking, sibship size, and housing style, and interactions with site of residence, were also explored.
  • Most of Batuman's chapters describe some bizarre trek she gruelingly undertook (easily financed by gullible graduate funders), yet she confoundingly, incongruously speaks against this very form of research early in the book, thus, nothing or everything adding up in the end: The Possessed : Academics Going to the Trades
  • Also confounding the picture is the fact that many clock- and watch-makers supplemented their income by making silver and jewelry or importing goods.
  • That is why Dali's importance as an artist confounds all those facile publicity stunts, his dubious political allegiances and his avaricious pursuit of wealth.
  • The reverend father Dom Calmet, a great antiquarian, that is, a great compiler of what was said in former times and what is repeated at the present day, has confounded lues with leprosy. A Philosophical Dictionary
  • They will also be confounded by the extent to which the Lizard King comes off as an addlebrained, self-important bore away from the studio or stage. Current Movie Reviews, Independent Movies - Film Threat
  • This kind of destruction should not be confounded with the burning of valuables during a potlatch.
  • Let his confounded tenants, his rifle-associations, his drunkards, reclaimed and unreclaimed, get on as they liked.
  • This information was essential in permitting an accurate estimation of the safety thresholds of inhaled corticosteroid use and in eliminating confounding by use of oral corticosteroids.
  • Kilcummin were confounding the critics as they played with dash and flair, first to every ball as they attacked in waves.
  • At any rate," said Smith, "we know that the confounded stuff isn't antimagnetic, whatever it is. The Lord of Death and the Queen of Life
  • Incessant and intrusive editing, numerous jump- and cross-cuts and confounding time shifts, work to disorient the viewer.
  • There were no towers or battlements: only the faceted tholus, climbing until it lost itself against the sky and its momentary brilliancies were confounded with the faint star's. The Shadow of the Torturer
  • And it features clown cars full of Gucci clad consultants throwing bright shiny confounding pies in the face of the opposition, the voters, and anybody flashing his minicam in the general vicinity.
  • The prime minister has the opportunity over these next 10 days to confound the cynics.
  • They confuse and they confound. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's unclear quite why the rebranding has taken place, and it has confounded garden historian and critic Tim Richardson, who originally coined the phrase "conceptual garden" and championed Britain's burgeoning conceptual-design scene. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Nowhere has he been more successful at confounding expectations — in a good way — than in the main theater, where the digital-like wire grid motif takes on folds, crimps and chamfered edges, making the truly blue space feel comfortably snug although being inside a quilted Chanel bag also comes to mind and ready-made for at least a double feature. Designed to Evoke the Future of Filmmaking...
  • It's all right, you confounded muddlehead!" cried the Crow, losing patience with his perverse and stupid companion. For the term of his natural life
  • Not to confound this person with the sour-faced man who sat glumpy, upon the bench taking snuff, the night before, let us call him Morgridge Klaus. Seven Little People and their Friends
  • Is this then a thing of that worth, that for it my soul should suffer, and become worse than it was? as either basely dejected, or disordinately affected, or confounded within itself, or terrified? Meditations
  • After that I haue longe mused by my self of the sore confounded and vncertayne cours of mannys lyfe, and thinges therto belonginge: at the last The Ship of Fools, Volume 1
  • Logistic regression models were used to determine which variables significantly and independently could predict bacterial pneumonia and to adjust for potential confounders.
  • More importantly, it was the confounding of all sceptics. Times, Sunday Times
  • Actually, the number of diseases, deaths and social costs are indemonstrable since there is a huge number of factors that can confound the attribution to smoking, and also because of the ignorance of medicine about the precise causes of diseases such as cancer in general, lung cancer in particular, cardiovascular diseases and so on.
  • The condition in question is often loosely confounded with connation, or the union of two leaves by their bases. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • Seele und ihr Gott_ -- these two, eternally akin, yet in their kinship unconfounded, make up the theme and the content of religion; and any attempt to obliterate the distinction between them in some monistic formula, any tendency to surrender either the Divine or the human personality, any philosophy which seeks to merge man in God and God in the {242} universe, is fatal to religion itself. Problems of Immanence: studies critical and constructive
  • The selection of and adjustment for potential confounders needs greater clarity, consistency, and explanation
  • Conclusions- Increasing waist-hip ratio is negatively associated with the probability of conception per cycle, before and after adjustment for confounding factors.
  • He was so confounded at her discourse that he could not answer a word.
  • It is important to geology not to confound the modern currents of lava, the heaps of basalt, green-stone, and phonolite, dispersed over the primitive and secondary formations, with those porphyroid masses having bases of compact feldspar, * which perhaps have never been perfectly liquified, but which do not less belong to the domain of volcanoes. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • We are unable to see the matter in the same light as our learned colleague does; to our thinking, we should be labouring under a great delusion were we to suppose "that it is quite as serious an omission not to determine the animal or vegetable nature of a ferment as it would be to confound nitrogen with hydrogen or urea with stearine. The Harvard Classics Volume 38 Scientific Papers (Physiology, Medicine, Surgery, Geology)
  • In only a few years, it won't just be the Web that confounds you, it will be your personal computer.
  • The 234-page tract is laced with watercolors of plants, astronomical drawings and naked sylphs, but it is the language that truly confounds scholars.
  • Of all bores in the world, your quizzing, carping, text‑torturing sceptic is the worst - next to mule driving; and those confounded mules would bore a two inch auger hole through the meekness of Moses himself, were he their master. Life in the Rocky Mountains
  • With competition for his signature from Holland, Spain and the lower reaches of the Premiership, it's just another reason for a move which may have confounded expectations.
  • He may then lapse into overs of dross, with the memory of the potential remaining, a tad confoundingly. Times, Sunday Times
  • The data extraction sheet attempted to collate confounding variables (eg, environmental issues), but no data were provided in the trial reports.
  • Diachronic versus synchronic approaches vied with endocentric versus exocentric to confound the neophyte. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol III No 2
  • This has confounded the expectation that increased affluence, education, and contact with the outside world would reduce the preference for boys.
  • Adjustment had little impact on measures of association, but confounding by unmeasured factors cannot be ruled out.
  • How we got to this confoundingly complex point in gender relations is actually quite simple. Emily Bracken: Romantic Comedies Are Dying Because Romance Is Dead
  • In the amitie I speake of, they entermixe and confound themselves one in the other, with so universall a commixture, that they weare out and can no more finde the seame that hath conjoined them together. Of Friendship.
  • It is easy to call these changes by the name allotropism, but not the less do they confound our hasty generalizations. Medical Essays, 1842-1882
  • ' That ' s because French law — that ever-confounding instrument — allows cru producers to leave the word Beaujolais off their label altogether, and some winemakers have regarded its absence as an advantage. Quality Beaujolais: It
  • It was a suitably surreal showpiece for a night that confounded all expectations.
  • The estimates were adjusted for 16 major confounding factors.
  • Now, a little older and a little wiser, John finds himself in a very familiar predicament - having to save the world again from those confounded machines.
  • He finally looked at her, his expression confounded. Loving the Highlander
  • Beneath him, miraculously confounded with the seat, flies a speeding horse on which the man perches side-saddle.
  • A large longitudinal study that adequately controls for the main confounders and other background socioeconomic variables is required to clarify the ongoing controversy.
  • Instead, he has confounded expectations, and his anti-corruption purge has made him something of a hero.
  • The close score after 12 games confounds pre-match predictions that Kasparov would win this time by a large margin.
  • Sorrow and rage, shame, and his honors pride, Choking his soule, madly compeld him raue, Vntil his rage with vigor did confound His heauie hart; and left him in a swound. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • The traditional monument has tended to confound gender politics.
  • Which Rossiglione perceiving, hee stoode like a body without a soule, confounded with the killing of so deare a friend, losse of a chaste and honourable wife, and all through his owne overcredulous conceit. The Decameron
  • Having said that, she confounded my negative perceptions about modelling by being very good at it. Times, Sunday Times
  • Partial albinism, necessarily congenital, presenting a piebald appearance, must not be confounded with leukoderma, which is rarely seen in the young and which will be described later. Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
  • Otherwise, this lack of clarity can confuse and confound viewers.
  • But as the faith, which is not founded on revelation, must remain destitute of any firm assurance, the disciple of Plato imprudently relapsed into the habits of vulgar superstition; and the popular and philosophic notion of the Deity seems to have been confounded in the practice, the writings, and even in the mind of Julian. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Clinical history can be unreliable as a diagnostic indicator of latex allergy because of confounding variables.
  • The extraordinary election results confounded the government.
  • It will never cease to amaze me that so many people want to shop on a weekend and and it confounds me further that they are forming a queue at the door by 9.30 on a Sunday morning, if not sooner.
  • A system so boondoggled in the confounding complexity that it is near inscrutable? The Politics of Politics
  • Yet regulated vivisection has been confounded with antivivisection by the union of zany cranks and trade-unionized men of medicine, who have not refrained from the coercion of patients, from the deception of the public, from the inoculation of legislators with mendacity, capsuled in sophistry, and from the direct or indirect corruption or intimidation of not a few public journals. An Ethical Problem Or, Sidelights upon Scientific Experimentation on Man and Animals
  • The researchers found that the children who knew how the old red jack-in-the-box worked that is, they had unambiguous or unconfounded information went to play with the new box. Ellen Galinsky: Give the Gift of Curiosity for the Holidays -- Lessons From Laura Schulz
  • So she followed him into the presence of Naomi, whom she saluted after the godliest and goodliest fashion, and, when she looked on her, she was confounded at her exceeding seemliness and said to her, “O my lady, I commend thee to the safeguard of Allah, who made thee and thy lord fellows in beauty and loveliness!” The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night

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