Sentence examples for muddle of from inspiring English sources

"muddle of" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It usually has a negative connotation and is used to describe a confused, disorganized, or chaotic situation. For example, "The professor's desk was a muddle of papers and opened books."

Exact(58)

Politics is a muddle of moral and practical compromise.

In the usual muddle of gloom and relief.

His heart quickening for a moment in a muddle of protest and shame.

It is a muddle of thousands of overlapping counties, cities and districts.

The table (corrected online) also made a muddle of the main candidates' "most-worn phrases".

And so the boys carried on into puberty, in a colourful muddle of hearsay and experiment.

English, for example, is famously a muddle of German, Norse and medieval French.

Richard Strauss's strangely haunting fairy tale opera can often seem a muddle of metaphor and symbolism.

Instead, the muddle of merchandise reminded me of an end-of-season overstock sale.

This muddle of genres reflects a collapse of confidence in his ability to deliver anything.

As for consistency, the new law simply replaced one muddle of voting procedures with another.

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