Flustered in a sentence as an adjective

IMO, it was the first time someone had walked out on him, and he got flustered.

Can being flustered or off-kilter skew the impressions we give?

We're too old and out of date to use this modern technology, it just gets us flustered.

The thing is this can't be about are getting flustered at people for interrupting your thought.

This usually gets the person at the other end a bit confused and flustered as they check their notes.

The poor person drawing blood was so flustered trying to answer questions, she was like "I'm sorry, I'm not the fastest.

If you want to do something outside of the scope of what silverlight provides, then you're going to be flustered.

But there isn't time to get flustered or argue over blame, because another cue is rapidly approaching.

I have also seen people with degrees get flustered and give-up or fail to perform despite their years of formal schooling.

You cannot get angry or flustered, even when surrounded by thousands of bees desperately trying to sting you.

And I flustered, because I said no, but I corrected myself because I had crossed the border at Niagara Falls for a day trip.

I watched his 38 point game last night, and while he played pretty amazing, he did have moments where he looked confused and flustered when running the offense.

"Let's take this offline" is so common as to be a cliche, and if the speaker got flustered enough to get caught up in it, a decent moderator steps and makes that call.

I had this awesome dialog planned that would have resulted in deep insight all around but then the comment was downvoted to **** and I became flustered.

This goes on for a bit, and I can see them getting flustered, and they almost seem to resent me, as if I'm deliberately and maliciously trying to humiliate them by asking a question "that's not on the test".

Flustered definitions

adjective

thrown into a state of agitated confusion; (`rattled' is an informal term)

See also: perturbed rattled