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confuse造句
61. However, just to confuse matters, economies of scale plus economies of scope do not imply subadditivity. 62. Do not confuse your reader with technical terms or jargon. 63. Much of the technical literature on the subject seems to confuse the two sets of questions distinguished in this section. 64. Do not confuse it with the Beta-Zeta pair, which is more widely separated. 65. The Home Office says the changes will close a loophole to organisations such as the Literal Democrats which appear designed to confuse. 66. The twins liked to confuse their teachers by switching seats. 67. The workers accused the researchers of trying to confuse them and possibly cheat them out of their bonuses. 68. It was never clear whether there was actually a Fifth or whether the whole array was simply devised in order to confuse Tehran. 69. Don't show him the other way of doing it - it'll only confuse him. 70. Leaders who confuse vision with cliche, however, betray their own ignorance of the human part of performance and change challenges. 71. They confuse popularity with wealth, and you are labelled as stingy. 72. They are mostly Labour voters but several confuse their Labour candidate with the leader of the Liberal Democrats. 73. Don't confuse poor decision- making with destiny. Own your mistakes. It’s ok; we all make them. Learn from them so they can empower you!Steve Maraboli 74. But I worry that the different sounds for the same object will confuse her. 75. His reply was inpart denial of the criticisms, and inpart an attempt to change the issue or confuse the matter. 76. Section 240 seeks to ensure that recipients of the latter will not confuse them with statutory accounts. 77. The conmen use baffling jargon when they talk about those deals, to confuse their victims. 78. Or was he merely seeking to confuse people in the West who have been calling for military intervention? 79. Such statements serve only to confuse and prevent artists from being creative. 80. Many documents, especially from the nineteenth century, contain redundant words which only serve to confuse. 81. The electric current has been set to confuse a small brain area, about the size of a pencil eraser. 82. We should not however confuse the transaction with the eventual use of the raw material. 83. The politicians, on the lookout for arguments to extend their authoritarianism, jumped at this opportunity to confuse the issue. 84. The ballot issue is a subterfuge designed to confuse voters. 85. It would be difficult to confuse this with any other species. 86. Only interviews with the prime suspects could enlighten us now but, instead, they served to confuse still further. 87. Do not confuse limitations on the accrual of benefits with limitations on deductible contribution. 88. This attempt to confuse the issue went unanswered, and Santa Anna continued his preparations to advance on the capital. 89. The best way not to confuse them is to keep them separate. 90. Using measures which explain variations in utilisation in normative formulas is to confuse what is with what ought to be.