muddle
71muddle — I. verb (muddled; muddling) Etymology: probably from obsolete Dutch moddelen, from Middle Dutch, from modde mud; akin to Middle Low German mudde Date: 1676 transitive verb 1. to make turbid or muddy 2. to befog or stupefy especially with liquor 3 …
72muddle — to make turbid or muddy …
73muddle — mud·dle || mÊŒdl n. mess, disorganization; confusion v. confuse; mess up; soil; disturb; cause disorder; struggle through, push on …
74muddle — v. a. 1. Make muddy, make turbid. 2. Stupefy, fuddle, inebriate, confuse, make half drunk, make tipsy. 3. Make a mess of, muff, mull, spoil …
75muddle — mud·dle …
76ˌmuddle ˈon — phrasal verb to continue living or doing something in a confused way without planning …
77Muddle-headed — Muddlehead Mud dle*head , n. A stupid person; a blunderer. [Colloq.] C. Reade. {Mud dle head ed}, a. [Colloq.] Dickens. [1913 Webster] …
78muddle through — intransitive verb Date: circa 1864 to achieve a degree of success without much planning or effort …
79muddle through — Synonyms and related words: clear, clear the hurdle, come along, come on, contrive, crowd, cut the mustard, do, drive on, engineer, fare, forge ahead, get along, get by, get on, go on, go slow, hack it, inch forward, make it, make out, make the… …
80muddle-headed — (Roget s Thesaurus II) adjective Mentally uncertain: addled, addlepated, confounded, confused, confusional, perplexed, turbid. Informal: mixed up. See CLEAR …