garble|garbled|garbles|garbling in English

verb

[gar·ble || 'gɑrbl /'gɑːbl]

distort, jumble, mix up, confuse; misrepresent, falsify

Use "garble|garbled|garbles|garbling" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "garble|garbled|garbles|garbling" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "garble|garbled|garbles|garbling", or refer to the context using the word "garble|garbled|garbles|garbling" in the English Dictionary.

1. But he didn't say that — and if he was garbling his words there was method in his garble .

2. You might think based on that, that garble and garbage were related, since what's left once you remove the good stuff by garbling it, is the bad stuff, or garbage.

3. His speech was garbled.

4. Say again, you are garble.

5. It came across all channels, but it's garbled.

6. He gave a garbled account of what had happened.

7. They "gobble", and Gore's gobbling soon turnssintos"garble".

8. You garble my words from their real meaning.

9. DSP timing solution for the problem showed garbled.

10. He gave a garbled account of the meeting.

11. The nervous man gave a garbled account of the accident.

12. The papers had some garbled version of the story.

13. He left a rather garbled message on my answerphone.

14. I understand this communication, half garbled as it is.

15. The newspapers had some garbled version of the story.

16. Foreign newspapers gave a garbled account of the President's speech.

17. The account appears in garbled form in the New Testament.

18. The voice on the tape was too garbled to understand.

19. Pick two from the same area and they can become garbled.

20. There was a garbled message from her on my answering machine.

21. Make a slight modification to solve the reception problem of garbled data.

22. Abilities - Ability to check message contents for garble, completeness, misdirection and message number sequence.

23. The inherited mythology is garbled(Sentencedict), and its guiding value lost or misconstrued.

24. During the Renaissance, for example, it surfaced repeatedly albeit in somewhat garbled form.

25. A computer description of a garbled or otherwise unintelligible sequence of signals or other data.