Sentence examples for likely to confuse from inspiring English sources

Exact(60)

But also like the WikiLeaks documents, the Palestine papers are likely to confuse the reader, rather than shed light on the nuances and texture of complicated negotiations.

Is anybody really likely to confuse one address with the other?

But the caveats on the labels seem more likely to confuse people than to help them.

• To the Editor: Michael Alderman's Op-Ed artislikelylikely to confuse the public.

But the range of choices is more likely to confuse than to clarify.

While the ads may convince some people, they are just as likely to confuse as help.

The crux of this appeal is whether concurrent use of the two marks is likely to confuse the public.

The British Medical Association, the doctors' union, criticised the bandings exercise as "simplistic", potentially misleading and likely to confuse patients.

The Michigan Court of Appeals overturned an earlier ruling that the petition was improperly worded and likely to confuse voters.

To Mr. Obama, a simpler program — one less likely to confuse people — is often a smarter program.

But anyone relying on it in a sensitive situation is likely to confuse lots of other people.

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