confuse
ਉਲਝਾ
definition
verb
past and present blurred together, confusing her still further
cause (someone) to become bewildered or perplexed.
example
It's very easy to 'confuse' the two which is why some people may tell you that I speak in a Long Island tongue.
It is very easy to 'confuse' questions as to what is the jurisdiction of a court and how that jurisdiction should be exercised.
It is easy to 'confuse' greatness in a specialized field with skill in writing about it.
He was avoiding the subject, and was using characters he'd played to distract and 'confuse' her.
You may feel the first of these tends to 'confuse' the issue rather than illuminate it, and you may be right.
purchasers might 'confuse' the two products
First, no one with half a brain could possibly 'confuse' the two products.
I think I'm separate enough from this character where people aren't going to 'confuse' us.
a lot of people 'confuse' a stroke with a heart attack
purchasers might 'confuse' the two products
It is easy to 'confuse' the apples of reporting with the oranges of privilege.
a lot of people 'confuse' a stroke with a heart attack
The humor is uncomfortable on purpose, but it's very easy to 'confuse' it with a humor that's unsure and amateur.
It's easy to 'confuse' this prudent conservatism with adherence to principle, but that would be a mistake.
We won't 'confuse' our having made mistakes with our having no right to be here.
People don't usually forget our names, or get them wrong, or 'confuse' us with other people.
Most straight people 'confuse' me and I really am unable to comprehend them.
As a progressive and an atheist, Christians 'confuse' me as much as the next person.
the points made by the authors 'confuse' rather than clarify the issue
Look closely at the editorial: don't they completely avoid and try to 'confuse' the point?
the points made by the authors 'confuse' rather than clarify the issue
Campaigners 'confuse' the issue with complex legal and medical argument.
It's easy to 'confuse' protagonists with their authors.
However, it would be a mistake to 'confuse' sensible with safe.
It was the fatal mistake of the medieval church to 'confuse' and confound the two kingdoms.
Many fantasy epics give us colorful enemies with distinct personalities to 'confuse' us.
The authors 'confuse' their contempt of the opposition with an accurate apprehension of the opposition.
One thing that does continually 'confuse' me though is people who get married more than once.
It is at his home that she meets this woman, who is to complicate and 'confuse' other relationships in the book, and finally draw in on all of them a terrifying wave of scandal.
Never before has so much depended on maintaining order within a partnership, that is also, 'confusingly' , a relationship of opposition and rivalry.
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