Narrowed eyes, frowning, knitted brows, glancing from right to left. Your email address will not be published. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam.
Learn how your comment data is processed. They have to be shown. FeelLines runs every Thursday on Twitter. To top. English American Examples Translations. Sign up for free and get access to exclusive content:. Free word lists and quizzes from Cambridge.
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Usage explanations of natural written and spoken English. Grammar Thesaurus. Word Lists. Choose your language. My word lists. Confuse, disconcert, embarrass imply temporary interference with the clear working of one's mind.
To confuse is to produce a general bewilderment: to confuse someone by giving complicated directions. To disconcert is to disturb one's mind by irritation, perplexities, etc. To embarrass is to cause one to be ill at ease or uncomfortable, so that one's usual judgment and presence of mind desert one: to embarrass someone by unexpected rudeness.
Words nearby confuse Confucian , Confucianism , Confucius , con fuoco , confusable , confuse , confused , confused elderly , confused flour beetle , confusing , confusion.
Words related to confuse amaze , astonish , baffle , befuddle , bemuse , complicate , confound , daze , demoralize , disconcert , disorient , distract , embarrass , fluster , frustrate , involve , misinform , mislead , mortify , muddle. How to use confuse in a sentence Upside down and confuse d, the owl relaxed its wings, and I used my free arm to tuck them first against its body and then the body against me as though holding a swaddled newborn child.
Beth Mole August 27, Ars Technica. It's difficult to come up with a much better definition that the description in your question, but this one fits:. Not to be confused with the movie " Clueless ," whose protagonist actually was not. Clueless, that is The this is a characteristic and you can use it to describe someones character as permanent as it gets.
Finally, a common word for a person who is having problems deciding is indecisive. I would called such a person an addlepate. Merriam-Webster unhelpfully defines that as one who is addle-pated , which it then defines here as someone who is mixed up or confused. Addled is shorter if you want an adjective. Someone who is confused because they are hesitant or unable to make a decision, given a set of options to select from, could be called dithering , irresolute or perhaps a vacillator.
Of course, obtaining the options to select from may be a similarly difficult task for this person. A state of confusion and being unable to decide what to do are different, I think. If the primary characteristic that you're trying to label concerns making decisions, then I'd agree with Unreason, indecisive is probably appropriate. But I'm not sure people without specific medical conditions would realistically be permanently confused. Some people are more prone to confusion, or to being overwhelmed.
Maybe detached?
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