Sentence examples for bit puzzled about from inspiring English sources

Exact(8)

"I'm a bit puzzled about this one," he said, over a cup of tea in the beer garden, under a sign reading "Friends welcome: relatives by appointment".

Over the years I'd been a bit puzzled about Ms. Ferraro, who was 75 when she died on March 26 of complications of the cancer that invaded her, multiple myeloma.

We non-defense experts are a bit puzzled about why an attack by maniacs armed with box cutters justifies spending $15 billion on 70-ton artillery pieces, or developing three different advanced fighters (before Sept. 11 even administration officials suggested that this was too many).

"We will withdraw from the ABM treaty on our timetable at a time convenient to America," he said -- as some elementary schoolchildren in the audience looked a bit puzzled about why the president had turned from answering their questions about sports, his daily exercise routine and the size of the White House to fielding reporters' queries about arms control.

I hope you understand that the fragile normalisation in Russia-NATO relations could be seriously shattered by your misinformed approach and intentionally wrong findings.Dmitry Rogozin Permanent representative of Russia to NATO BrusselsGermany in Europe* SIR – I was a bit puzzled about your somewhat superficial approach to German foreign policy ("A new game of dominoes", November 14th).

In line with this I am a bit puzzled about the strong distinction that is made between the "tinkering from inside" and "tinkering from outside".

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Similar(51)

Many television plays these days, even soaps, tend to leave the viewer a bit puzzled, indeed uneasy, about what the meaning was, if indeed there was a meaning.Jérôme Lindon became himself uneasy about the future of literature.

"I'm a bit puzzled that people talk about AI ethics," added Chace.

This left me a bit puzzled as to what his story about stagnation actually is.I had thought that the key to the full-employment-leading-to-bubbles relationship was that: 1) full employment required a prolonged period of low interest rates, 2) and low interest rates lead to soaring asset prices, such that 3) full employment could not be achieved without accompanying bubbles.

Practically every other thing said on the main stage during the myriad discussions was some variation on the phrase "the cloud," and it left me a bit puzzled because we were under a tent and didn't really have to worry about rain.

I'm still a bit puzzled, and when I check later, the list of all the things he'd hated about Clouds included, "The counsellors themselves".

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