Sentence examples for confusing examples from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Whatever style you choose, in any usage controversy, should be constrained by good sense, not by artificial and intentionally confusing examples.

Similar(58)

For most, the existence of the standalone Google Photos makes Google+ Photos redundant, and perhaps a bit confusing (Example A: this post).

Some of the terminology is confusing – for example, the router has three modes: IP sharing mode, Router (Disable NAT) and Access Point, with clunkily written config pages and help files: if you don't know your NAT from your PPPoE, you'll be tearing your hair out.

* The first paragraph of the Discussion is confusing (for example, using double-negatives): this section should be re-worked to clearly state what was previously shown, and then clearly state what the current study adds to the story.

This should not be confused with examples of Lamarckian adaptation by pre-evolved mechanisms which address a specific type of novelty.

At times he appears confused, for example saying that India is "one of the most ardently capitalist countries in the world", but later quoting a friend who more accurately describes its "relatively controlled brand of capitalism".

It shouldn't even be mentioned in the same breath as Richard Linklater's Dazed and Confused, for example, which is funnier and more perceptive, far more authentic and alive, and much more interesting as both social history and cinema.

However, we were not happy with how we built placeholders, and we got clear feedback that some customers were confused (for example, with files not being available when offline), and that some applications didn't work well with placeholders and that sync reliability was not where we needed it to be.

It should not be confused, for example, with the related problem of de novo motif identification, which arises in RNA analysis when the input data consist of two or more sequences that are presumed to share an unknown structural motif in common, and the task is to produce a local structural alignment that identifies the common motif and infers its common structure.

People sometimes believe they recognize things that they have never actually encountered, for example, confusing a stranger with an old acquaintance.

For example, confusing mixed epidemics have occasionally been described, such as YFV plus CHIKV, DENV plus CHIKV, or more recently Plasmodium falciparum malaria plus DENV1 and CHIKV on Madagascar's east coast [ 1].

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