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Discover LudwigThe phrase "confusing image" is a perfectly acceptable and grammatically correct expression in written English.
It can be used to refer to a visual image that can be difficult to understand or interpret. For example, you might say "The blurry photograph gave me a confusing image of the city skyline."
Exact(6)
We're still confusing image and reality.
"It's sort of a confusing image: Republican as victim," Mr. Rebovich said.
Yet if you look beyond party politics at some of the things that have distinguished America mobility, immigration, meritocracy, volunteerism a more confusing image emerges: not so much one of division but of a centrifuge.
Eleven fell on day two and though the pitch remains good, Bruce Martin's fingers will be itching to get their hands on the ball (which is rather a confusing image if you think about it too literally).
Ms. Diller designed the overall exhibition plan so that the people leaning over the flasks are visible in shadowy outline through a translucent partition that separates them from the very first room of the show, a potentially confusing image for visitors who are just entering.
Although we tend to think that our eyes faithfully report whatever is in front of us, the retina records an imperfect and confusing image that needs to be tidied up by the brain.
Similar(51)
She embarks on a chaotic trip full of flashy, confusing images.
Filmmaker Samm Hodges attempts to explain the phenomenon in his new video, "Illusions," a dazzling survey of optical trickery that recounts visually confusing images like the Spinning Dancer and the Necker Cube.
The confused image of Bin Laden as a victim was exacerbated by John Brennan, the Obama national security aide who intemperately presented an inaccurate portrait of what had happened on the third floor in Abbottabad.
Another gem taken from Learn Guitar With David Brent, the dusty, Dire Straits Americana of Oh La La adopts the creepy highway lothario narrative of Free Love... and includes the confused image of a man smoking a cigar in the desert sun.
X-rays go all the way through the layers of paint, so they produce a more confused image".Art conservators are like doctors who prescribe medicine without knowing the anatomy of their patients"The National Gallery's laboratory is not the only one in the game.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com