muddle

/ˈmʌd.əl/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈmʌd.əl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈmə-dᵊl/ (ame, mw) · /ˈmʌdl/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈmʌdl/ (ame, ipa)

muddle — noun

1. a situation where things are in disorder or arranged untidily, so it is difficul

1.名詞B2
釋義

a situation where things are in disorder or arranged untidily, so it is difficult to use, find, or understand them

例句

Esme's tax papers were in a complete muddle on the kitchen table.

in a muddle for disordered things

After the move, the boxes of books had become a real muddle in the spare room.

become a muddle for piling up over time

同義詞
  • mess

    more general; covers dirt as well as disorder

  • jumble

    emphasises items mixed without pattern

  • clutter

    many objects taking up space, not necessarily disordered

反義詞

文法句型

in a muddle

get into a muddle

用法筆記

Subject is usually concrete objects or papers, not abstract concepts. Often appears with 'in a' or 'into a', describing the physical state of items rather than someone's mental state — that is sense 2.

常見錯誤

My thoughts are in a muddle about the exam.
I am in a muddle about the exam.
💡when the confusion is mental, the person is in the muddle, not their thoughts.

2. a state of being confused in your thinking, especially when you mix up separate

2.名詞B2
釋義

a state of being confused in your thinking, especially when you mix up separate facts or details in your head

例句

Christopher always gets into a muddle when he tries to count the change in euros.

get into a muddle over numbers / unfamiliar systems

Nila was in such a muddle about the train times that she went to the wrong station.

in a muddle about for confusion over schedules

同義詞
  • confusion

    more formal; can describe both mental and physical disorder

  • mix-up

    single specific error rather than ongoing confusion

反義詞

文法句型

get into a muddle about/over

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 1: here the muddle is inside the person's mind, not in the physical world. Usually paired with 'about' or 'over' followed by the topic of confusion.

muddle — verb