Similar words: confuse, infuse, conform, confide, confirm, confine, confess, conflict. Meaning: [-zd] adj. 1. perplexed by many conflicting situations or statements; filled with bewilderment 2. lacking orderly continuity 3. having lost your bearings; confused as to time or place or personal identity 4. thrown into a state of disarray or confusion 5. mentally confused; unable to think with clarity or act intelligently.
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211 Female speaker Carers are often confused because they don't know which of the many agencies to go to.
212 In the confused laws of the cockney underworld, they were good blokes in the community they terrorised.
213 Permanently low blood pressure, meanwhile, shouldn't be confused with temporary hypotension.
213 Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
214 We began sorting them into different area sizes as we were getting confused with those we had and didn't have.
215 Every time someone tries to explain the Internet to me, I get even more confused.
216 Has a wild goose grown desperate and confused by the disappearance of all grain and berries?
217 It is therefore unsurprising that such seizures are sometimes confused with panic attacks.
218 He thought back and ... and it was all so confused and seemed so long ago.
219 The electrons become confused, often losing track of the partner they brought to the dance.
220 Gentiles are often confused about proper behavior, gifts, and attire.
221 Numbers Most business writers get confused about when to spell out numbers and when to use numerals.
222 Haters are confused admirers who can’t understand why everybody else likes you. Paulo Coelho
223 Daak had looked confused: he marched straight to Ace, but seemed not to know what to do next.
224 Cellular phones, too, often evoke a confused state of dread.
225 If Bruno felt confused or anxious, he could always simply smile and lie there.
226 We need to see the comfort a confused old person derives from holding a prayer book or rosary.
227 Male moths become confused by the signals and are unable to find mates.
228 The Press Secretary gave a completely different version of events, which greatly confused the situation.
229 Was she a silly adolescent girl to be so confused and seduced by a handsome face? a beautiful body?
230 No wonder our clergymen look anxious, and their congregations confused!
231 Antiquity, aesthetics and prejudice are colliding in a confused debate.
232 Some one else who is sometimes confused perhaps likes a trip to the pub at lunch-time.
233 The feuding between ministers during the revivals had robbed them of some prestige and had confused people who were looking for stability.
234 The report also notes the confused assumptions that governed the relationship between Kimmel and Short.
235 Whether voters are bored, confused or scared of losing popular services, it seems to be a dead duck.
236 But, the reader will become confused and distracted by passives, so avoid them.
237 In a confused situation, the demonstrators also apparently set upon army units dispatched to the radio station to arrest the mutineers.
238 Expert witnesses should not be confused with expert determination: see 1.6.3.
239 There, but too confused for events to register in my memory.
240 It should not be confused with the carve gybe which is used in high winds without the centreboard.
More similar words: confuse, infuse, conform, confide, confirm, confine, confess, conflict, confront, confident, confounded, confession, conference, conflict with, confrontation, confederation, in full, effusive, transfuse, in future, in full swing, constitutional convention, used to, on fire, on foot, bemused, advised, based on, be used to, supersede.