Confuse
31confuse — verb 1》 make (someone) bewildered or perplexed. 2》 make (something) less easy to understand. ↘identify wrongly. Derivatives confusing adjective confusingly adverb Origin ME: from OFr. confus, from L. confusus, past participle of confundere… …
32confuse — v. a. 1. Mingle, intermingle, mix, blend, confound. 2. Disorder, disarrange, derange, disturb, jumble, throw into disorder or confusion. 3. Perplex, obscure, darken, render uncertain. 4. Mystify, embarrass, pose, nonplus, bewilder, flurry. 5.… …
33confuse — v 1. blend, mix, intermix, combine, mingle, intermingle, commingle; blur, make unclear or indistinct, obscure, merge, lump together, tangle, entangle; mix up, transpose, interchange, juggle, switch. 2. mistake, confound, mix up, fail to see or… …
34confuse — Ho opohihihi, ho ohuikau. Also: hōkai, ho opōna ana a, hō ale ale, ho opūhili, pahili, ho ole ole o, hōle ole o, nāwā, kūālauwili, pe elulu …
35confuse — v.tr. 1 a disconcert, perplex, bewilder. b embarrass. 2 mix up in the mind; mistake (one for another). 3 make indistinct (that point confuses the issue). 4 (as confused adj.) mentally decrepit. 5 (often as confused adj.) throw into disorder (a… …
36confuse the issue — make a something more complicated …
37confess vs confuse — Confess is a verb. It is used when someone admits or states that they have committed a crime or are at fault in some way. For example: She refused to confess to something she had not done. Confuse is a verb. It is used when someone causes… …
38confess vs confuse — Confess is a verb. It is used when someone admits or states that they have committed a crime or are at fault in some way. For example: She refused to confess to something she had not done. Confuse is a verb. It is used when someone causes… …
39equity does not confuse jurisdiction — The Latin form is aequitas jurisdictiones non confundit …
40nfuse — confuse …