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muddled

[ US /ˈmədəɫd/ ]
[ UK /mˈʌdə‍ld/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. confused and vague; used especially of thinking
    woolly thinking
    your addled little brain
    muddleheaded ideas
    woolly-headed ideas

How To Use muddled In A Sentence

  • I moved back to the window and stared again at the muddled urban view where the new intermingled with the old. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
  • It was the passionate, slightly muddled rancour of a disappointed man.
  • He left his clothes in a muddled pile in the corner.
  • My own church had a rather muddled concept of algetic offering that at least produced the proper endurance-discipline. The Golden Torc
  • Pretty soon I overheard a conversation between two muddled buyers.
  • The situation remains muddled in center field.
  • In fact, the Penguins muddled to a sixth place finish in the regular season standings with a .500 record to become one of eight playoff qualifiers.
  • You can say that you genuinely forgot, or got muddled up or fibbed. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was the passionate, slightly muddled rancour of a disappointed man.
  • For understandable reasons we prefer to think of ourselves as rational agents who live meaningful lives rather than as muddled actors in a theatre of the absurd.
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