Fumbling in a sentence as an adjective

I really feel like SnapChat is fumbling this whole thing.

But look again at that guy fumbling around with his mouse.

It takes so dang long to mark off a list while pushing a shopping cart and fumbling with a phone.

No fumbling around with browsers to upload or download files.

The same people who fiddle with gps while driving would be fumbling to unfold a map while driving.

" I was fumbling for something in my car and no one was behind me, so I just sat there for a minute.

Moving to a plaintext password system to get fewer support requests is like removing the door from your house so you don't have to keep fumbling for the key.

The interfaces that are shown in the documentation remind me of the computer system you see DMV employees fumbling around with.

As a kid fumbling around proprietary Windows binaries, I felt liberated by the ideas of Fravia and +ORC.

This post would have easily saved me weeks of fumbling around, false starts, procrastinating, and looking around for the appropriate resources and frameworks.

Despite a first lesson that was so painfully fumbling and awkward I almost gave up, I showed up once more and figured out the key: when you start to fall over to the left, steer to the left, and you will suddenly no longer be falling.

Honestly fully-sentient machines in 16 years seems totally ridiculous on its face to me regardless of what kind of graphs and charts about technological progress can be shown off. While I'm not really up to speed on AI research, in the consumer space at least we've just barely achieved a semi-automated house-vacuuming robot and fumbling speech-recognition in call centers.

He said Jobs was a good marketer and understood the benefits of technology.> When it came to Apple's products, "while everyone else was fumbling around trying to find the formula, he had the better instincts," he said.> According to Wozniak, Jobs told him around the time he left Apple in 1985 that he had a feeling he would die before the age of 40.

Fumbling definitions

adjective

showing lack of skill or aptitude; "a bungling workman"; "did a clumsy job"; "his fumbling attempt to put up a shelf"

See also: bungling clumsy incompetent