confusing造句61. What looks beautiful to you may be a confusing mishmash to others.
62. The mathematically confusing and politically risky question of local government funding has worried both administrations.
63. The reception at Holloway was so confusing and everyone was so aggressive.
64. To clarify things that may be confusing the men in their lives.
65. This might hamstring the government and its operation was sometimes confusing to foreign observers.
66. Florida listed an unusually high 10 presidential tickets, which contributed to confusing ballot designs in some counties.
67. And at the dawning of a new revelation change and growth will be painful, and at times confusing.
68. But for newcomers, it also has never been more confusing to get started.
69. With a postal questionnaire, it is important also to check that the layout is neither confusing nor encouraging any particular response.
70. The pressures to be either Black or lesbian make it very difficult and confusing to develop being Black and lesbian.
71. The more you try to decipher the more confusing it becomes.
72. The road signs were very confusing and we ended up getting lost.
73. The situation is confusing, but there is an interesting history behind it.
74. Therefore there were numerous double-entries for both O level and CSE, a procedure that was expensive and confusing.
75. In doing so he is confusing carbon fixation with the fate of phytoplankton.
76. To make matters just a bit more confusing, developers sometimes release a new build of the same program.
77. It was a confusing situation, no real clues, nothing concrete.
78. It is frustrating, confusing and severely diminishes the pleasure the writing could bring.
79. In practice this is not usually found confusing as long as one is aware of whether one is marking stress levels or intonation.
80. As a result, the advice that physicians and the media offer people based on what these experts say is often confusing.
81. This is what is meant by the rather confusing term random access.
82. First, the political demands on public enterprises lead to objectives that are confusing, changeable and often mutually at odds.
83. I found the book really confusing. I kept forgetting who the characters were.
84. So many confusing facts battered his brain he didn't know how to start sorting them out.
85. By confusing unrelated issues and taking information out of context, you do readers a great disservice.
86. He was acting out of spite, spurred on to punish the second Stillman for confusing him.
87. This can make editing a time consuming and confusing exercise when working with a large piece of music.
88. A major impetus has been that users found this detailed budgetary accounting confusing.
89. Media coverage of issues relating to a healthy lifestyle is certainly extensive, but can be confusing.
90. It's all so big and confusing - all them streets and cars and places.