Muddied in a sentence as an adjective

\nThat's good because "lots" and "of" are more muddied.

This severely muddied the waters of public opinion.

Just like real life, everything gets muddied, but you have far more people in the conversation that would be practical in reality.

There was some insight that was muddied by the confrontational language, and the semantic ambiguity introduced by marciovm123.

This capability becomes muddied and confused with proportional fonts.

And yet, 100% of their arguments in public were that they are needed for defenseOffense and defense are pretty muddied concepts for a superpower, when most activities it'll be doing could be categorized as "force projection", or something akin.

Do I want to publicly publish this information?The issue is being muddied because some people that answer 'no' to question #2 are using the gender of 'Other' as a hack around the system, when in reality their gender identity is not 'Other.

I think it might actually have more impact this way: it's not only information that's lacking, but public awareness of the law on beach access, deliberately muddied by some false information and low-level intimidation from homeowners.

But, I've dealt with services web services in C/C++, PHP, Python, Go, Java, etc. 5-10 years ago, Java and it's assorted frameworks had it's place, but the intersection of Jetty, JBoss/Tomcat, Glassfish, and plain old Java apps muddied the waters about managing Java apps.

The ability to use GCC for static analysis, for example, was muddied for many years by the GCC team's unwillingness to create a suitable API out of fear that it would become easier for proprietary software teams to use GCC without contributing.

Muddied definitions

adjective

(of color) discolored by impurities; not bright and clear; "dirty" is often used in combination; "a dirty (or dingy) white"; "the muddied grey of the sea"; "muddy colors"; "dirty-green walls"; "dirty-blonde hair"

See also: dirty dingy muddy