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"muddled up" is a correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It means confused or disorganized. It can be used in a variety of contexts, but it is most often used to describe a situation or thought process that is chaotic or jumbled. Example: "I can't make sense of this essay, it's all muddled up and doesn't flow logically."
Exact(60)
But we even muddled up this history.
But this point gets muddled up in two rather less conclusive ones.
The map in last week's special report on EU enlargement stupidly muddled up Slovakia and Slovenia.
A few muddled up the names of father and son in their chants.
However, the linear viscoelastic properties of asphalt mixtures are usually muddled up with their nonlinear viscoelastic properties.
The other week, I muddled up the titles of two of my books.
If it's any consolation I get Peter Tatchell and Peter Hain muddled up, too.
All Irish history is muddled he said and the American history 1775-1800 is the most muddled up American.
"Maybe because of interference from the studios, the female empowerment message that I was hoping to send got muddled up".
You don't suppose that writer-director Eli Roth is getting muddled up with, ahem, Slovenia, do you?
She told the newspaper that the street had "a glorious history about resisting Mosley's fascists in 1936" which the community did not want "muddled up by Ripper mythology".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com