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embrangle

VERB
  1. make more complicated or confused through entanglements

How To Use embrangle In A Sentence

  • It is apodeictic that the caliginosity of the agrestic embrangle periapts with mansuetude. Save the language! « Write Anything
  • It is apodeictic that the caliginosity of the agrestic embrangle periapts with mansuetude. Save the language! « Write Anything
  • I believed it was apodeictic that Collins was not as well known, but it appears I was embrangled. Save the language! « Write Anything
  • The portmanteau terms compossible and embrangle are similarly in the line of fire. Archive 2008-10-01
  • : cleansing or scouring agrestic: rural, rustic, unpolished, uncouth apodeictic: unquestionably true by virtue of demonstration caducity: perishableness, senility compossible: possible in coesistence with something else embrangle: to confuse or entangle exuviate: to shed (a skin or similar outer covering): short and stout, squat griseous Club Troppo
  • The ensuing grassroots campaign failed to save "embrangle" (to confuse or entangle) and "caliginosity" (dimness, darkness). Jezebel
  • I believed it was apodeictic that Collins was not as well known, but it appears I was embrangled. Save the language! « Write Anything
  • -- For my own part, whenever I attempt to frame a simple idea of time, abstracted from the succession of ideas in my mind, which flows uniformly and is participated by all beings, I am lost and embrangled in inextricable difficulties. A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge
  • Farewell embranglement, recrement, fusby and numerous others. Blogposts | guardian.co.uk
  • At its heart, this attitude embrangles the concepts of "need" and "want"; those fubsy fuddy-duddies with griseous imaginations believe that words no longer in frequent use will never in the future be needed by English speakers and writers more nitid than themselves. Archive 2008-10-01
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