Quagmire in a sentence as a noun

That's another perspective that may help you understand why IPv6 is a bit of a quagmire.

It does tend to be a quagmire of mediocrity and politics but not always.

An endless set of reworked plans toward overly grandiose goals can be a barren pivot quagmire.

RIM's problem has been that it has continued growing and getting more money despite falling deeper into a huge technical quagmire.

I suspect they want to improve their technical chops and felt a need to migrate away from Java in order to break free of their organizational quagmire.

Seriously does any normal thinking person really participate and contribute comments in that quagmire?

It's not like sympathetic cases where a company falls into a Kafka-esque quagmire of obscure regulations that only tangentially apply to what they're doing.

What happens next is that those employees will work for 1 year in Canada, and then will become eligible for L-1 intra-company transfer back to the US, side-stepping the H-1B quagmire.

The quagmire of vulnerabilities that we waded into, makes it infeasible to properly inform everyone involved..."Of course when we generate keys ourselves they work fine.

At this point, they're stuck in a quagmire of other bureaucratic nonsense and debates over related issues like whether packages will be allowed to require a particular init system.

It represents a quagmire which starts well, gets more complicated as time passes, and before long entraps its users in a commitment that has no clear demarcation point, no clear win conditions, and no clear exit strategy.

I had the good fortune to return to a former employer and see that: investing in a feature had paid off a ton even though the other PMs had opposed building it; my failed request that we not build certain features had, in fact, produced a quagmire in which we discovered a misset-for-years setting which produced a -15% offset in revenue.

Though he was relentlessly mocked for his over-the-top public appearances in years past, Ballmer was also relentlessly pro-Microsoft and it's very clear that the troubles of the past decade were at least in part not of his making: Ballmer inherited a Microsoft that had been driven into an antitrust quagmire by Mr. Gates, handicapping its ability to compete effectively or respond to new trends quickly.

Quagmire definitions

noun

a soft wet area of low-lying land that sinks underfoot

See also: mire quag morass slack