Fuzzy in a sentence as an adjective

"Have a mission" sounds fuzzy but I don't think that it is.

This message can sound a bit warm and fuzzy, but it is rooted in cold, hard science.

We start with a hard, fuzzy problem and then add to it the pressure to deliver only feel-good solutions.

Environmental groups don't talk about "conservation" and fuzzy ideas like that, not anymore, not in Washington.

"Programmer and database types will notice one problem immediately - no fuzzy string matching.

"Library for professional-quality creative coding in C++" is actually a pretty fuzzy, non-descriptive way to describe your project.

" Why would anyone think that making consumers feel bad is going to lead them to having the warm, fuzzy feelings necessary to buy their product?Last year's marketing for Windows Phone was awful because it didn't show the phone.

At its current fairly fuzzy resolution, it's what I'd guess a traditional magazine evolves into when it hits the Internet: a loose confederation of lightly edited writers with their own individual reputations.

In the USA, states and the federal government keep DNA indexes of suspects and unsolved crimes, and share information through a computer system maintained by the FBI."Guilt by the Numbers: How fuzzy is the math that makes DNA evidence look so compelling to jurors?

Fuzzy definitions

adjective

covering with fine light hairs; "his head fuzzed like a dandelion gone to seed"

See also: fuzzed

adjective

indistinct or hazy in outline; "a landscape of blurred outlines"; "the trees were just blurry shapes"

See also: bleary blurred blurry foggy hazy muzzy

adjective

confused and not coherent; not clearly thought out; "a vague and fuzzy idea of the world of finance"