Muddle in a sentence as a noun

If that's what's going on again, we can muddle through without great answers to #3.

You can still only be an expert in a subset and muddle your way through the rest.

> Folders are not a feature that beginners muddle through but pro users require.

We'll muddle on, even when an objective observer might look at us and shake her head in despair.

Sometimes lawyers are good, sometimes they muddle the water.

Our country may one day rediscover the value of liberty, but for now it's still a huge messy muddle.

Over the years, this has helped me develop clarity in some things, but I remain muddled in many others.

This was a chance to bring clarity and order to an otherwise muddled area of law and this panel, rightly or not, chose to go back to the muddle.

No. Inefficient algorithms are often good enough, typical programmers muddle through and yes pick up a textbook or reference wikipedia once in a while.

Muddle in a sentence as a verb

The normal productive solution, of course, would've been to just muddle through with whatever typesetting system his publisher was using, and stay focused on the book.

I'm happy when I can admit, at least to myself, that my thinking is muddled, and I try to overcome the embarassment that I might reveal ignorance or confusion.

While I appreciate Heroku's quick and decisive response, I don't quite follow why they felt the need to muddle the message by explicating that their sponsorship is handled by women.

While I don't actually care much about the public image of Germany, I am saddened that the European idea has lost its appeal and continues losing it. I mean, what could _possibly_ go wrong?All in all, I'd say the hodge-podge muddle-through way of things you see in Europe comes more natural to Germany than France.

From his "about" page on his MathOverflow profile:"Mathematics is a process of staring hard enough with enough perseverence at at the fog of muddle and confusion to eventually break through to improved clarity.

Sometimes you can get benefit from them courage or art or motivation to live a better life, sometimes they muddle your critical thinking skills and do a sloppy job solving problems because you believe some higher power will take care of the details.

The time frame there is 5-10 years where besides the 'muddle through' we often see in Europe, which is very possible, an implosion of the whole thing, a federation or both are all possibilities with massive consequences due to the inherent logic of monetary union.

Yet somehow these megasellers seem able to muddle on year after year?A lot of them are not necessarily even primarily e-commerce sellers, but are semi-camouflaged divisions of larger traditional publishing entities - like how the seller oneworldbooks is actually the textbook wholesaling giant MBS Books.

But, in that event, you must not make yourself responsible for the lives of others or expect good fortune; in a material sense you must expect to be ignored or destroyed.> To be a physician is to be a professional, ready to burn, to cauterize, to amputate; if that is what the disease requires, then to stop halfway because of personal qualms, or some rule unrelated to your art and its technique, is a sign of muddle and weakness, and will always give you the worst of both worlds.

Muddle definitions

noun

a confused multitude of things

See also: clutter jumble fuddle welter smother

noun

informal terms for a difficult situation; "he got into a terrible fix"; "he made a muddle of his marriage"

See also: hole mess pickle

verb

make into a puddle; "puddled mire"

See also: puddle

verb

mix up or confuse; "He muddled the issues"

See also: addle puddle