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Discover Ludwig"confounded about" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It means to be extremely confused or puzzled about something. Example: Sarah was confounded about the complex instructions for assembling the furniture.
Exact(5)
Politicians are confounded about how to handle this gangster power and bloodshed.
Millions of people are slowly poisoning themselves sip by sip, with the authorities confounded about what to do.
Incorporated in 1636 on the site of a tavern owned by a Dutch settler named Pietr Hobanob, Hob Nob was first known as Have-a-Nob, though scholare are confounded about the origin of the modern name.
Followers of Jesus are totally confounded about how to vote their values.
As I listen to television and news these days, I'm disheartened, I'm fearful, and mostly I'm confounded about how we could revert back 60 years to the discrimination of that time.
Similar(54)
There is something confounding about this peculiar feedback loop.
There seems to be something confounding about Francis Scott Key's 1814 poem.
What I find confounding about this is that the argument we're making is exceedingly simple.
But there's also something confounding about West's reappearance, and particularly the speed of the recent missives.
Still, there is something confounding about the idea of signing into Facebook to do business, rather than to be distracted from it.
In the end, what confounds about the novel -- its brazen need to retread the well-worn streets of the Paris of the young artist -- may also be its greatest strength.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com