Murky in a sentence as an adjective

And if the facts in 2002 are murky, so are Mr Modi’s views now.

That's a very murky pond to be looking into.

Although often protected by exclusivity etc. this makes the "public owns it" argument much more murky.

Given the nature of its claims, and the murky standards associated with its patent and copyright claims, it likely will get some damage award.

Visual design seems to have taken a hit - everything seems to just consist of either different murky shades of grey, or jarring skeumorphism.

I will save HN the time:"I can't believe that it's 2013 and people are still basing their entire company around the App Store with it's murky rules""But there's a lot of money to be made there, it's worth it!

It's also fairly murky as to how to escalate: if you've identified your problem area, strictified it a bunch, and it's still broken... well what then?The answer seems to be growing that internal expertise.

As a Canadian your freedom to torrent is probably greater than your American buddies - the legality of downloading is murky, though uploading is most definitely illegal.

But in a court of law, a lot can get lost in translation and, in the absence of a clear factual record, skilled lawyers have all sorts of room to confuse and confound the issues as they apply abstract legal rules to a murky factual record.

By multiplying them together, the solvers found a new prime"Excuse me?> "TOR is an obscure routing network that allows anonymous access to the “darknet” — the vast, murky portion of the Internet that cannot be indexed by standard search engines.

Ask folks who exercised options on shares whose value evaporated during the lockup period how they felt about their tax bill?This is an arms race we can't win, I'm pretty sure there's always going to be assets with values to murky to tax, but not too murky to borrow against no matter how generous we are with defining income.

"In the age of digital wonders, more than ever we are dependent upon the vigilance of citizens of conscience to protect us against Orwellian scenarios of those many wannabe Darth Vadors lurking in the murky depths of the governmental bureaucracy..."This is probably the most sober assessment of the current situation which is both optimistic and depressing simultaneously.

Murky definitions

adjective

(of liquids) clouded as with sediment; "a cloudy liquid"; "muddy coffee"; "murky waters"

See also: cloudy muddy mirky turbid

adjective

dark or gloomy; "a murky dungeon"; "murky rooms lit by smoke-blackened lamps"

See also: mirky