Mired in a sentence as an adjective

We're mired in, frankly, a lot of junk.

And sometimes people with far more precise and mathematical minds just get mired in their beautiful architectures.

I see where you are coming from, but I think you're getting mired in some of the details of the talk that perhaps rub you the wrong way and are therefore missing the larger point.

You seem to be mired in apologia about psychiatry even as you deride its primary practical tool.

Another point I haven't seen raised: when it comes to VR hardware and software, anyone who doesn't get in bed with a Titan will end up mired in one ******** patent suit after another.

This is, apart from anything else, a sure sign of our complexity, and of our capacity to rise above our current way of living and search for alternatives, no matter how deeply we're mired.

This is kind of like the ways I have helped my boyfriend learn programming except for how it is hopelessly mired in the idea that programmers are guys who have cutely technologically impaired girlfriends.

GPU h/w acceleration on mobile devices isn't optional any more and rather than getting mired in the 'real soon now' world of Linux graphics they can get on with the job of producing real and usable devices.

You will be mired in a bad deal, generally unrecognized outside of your discipline, and continuously exploited by university administrators.

"These are the developers who have the intelligence, experience, and organizational understand to make the kinds of decisions that keep a team or product running smoothly along, as opposed to getting mired in spaghetti code, rewrites, refactoring, etc. And the larger and more complex projects are, the harder this is, and the more valuable it is.

Man alive, Mozilla just inspires meI am stealing this and the Turing oath to go as part of my own company's values backgroundI am especially glad they focused on the public good side of the Internet and did not get mired in privacy debatesThis is going in front of as many UK council leaders as will listen at the LGA conference JulyThanks guys

Mired definitions

adjective

entangled or hindered as if e.g. in mire; "the difficulties in which the question is involved"; "brilliant leadership mired in details and confusion"

See also: involved