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to disarray
noun
Want of array or regular order; disorder; confusion.
Exact(13)
Yet France's party balance looks increasingly volatile, thanks to disarray on both the left and the right.
The program does not involve local Mexican police officers from border cities, where drug corruption has reduced some municipal police forces to disarray.
New Zealand took a bonus point for scoring four tries and John Smit's Springboks were close to disarray in the rain and wind of Wellington.
His predecessor John Paul I, an amiable but delicate man, had died soon after his election, and the Catholic church itself was close to disarray.
Even supporters of the administration's policy say its efforts are in jeopardy, and minute military planning gave way to disarray once the major combat ended.
The Anglican church's persecution at the hand of the Zimbabwean government points to disarray within as well as the inexplicable influence of a disillusioned former cleric.
Similar(44)
That they eluded contact with institutions of fine art owes something to personal disarray and something to chance, in a ratio impossible to gauge.
But Cornyn's response to the disarray wasn't to slow things down.
Pulp brought a kind of magic to their disarray, just as they brought a kind of poetry to the everyday, to the familiar.
While some early writers were trying to pin English down, others were contributing to its disarray, as Mr. Lynch notes.
The situation is in stark contrast to the disarray in the squad two years ago which led to Hope Powell losing her job as head coach.
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