mire|mired|mires|miring in English
verb
['maɪə(r)]
muddy; become stuck in mud; become involved in difficulties, get in trouble
Use "mire|mired|mires|miring" in a sentence
1. Clubhouse was already mired in controversy
2. When it's wet it's a mire out there.
3. You're still mired in a pit of poor health and crippling debt.
4. He has rescued me from the mire of misery.
5. The wheels got stuck in the mire.
6. Baalitical list of dissertation framing mired pace whomever needlewoman unequally
7. Bolivia was mired in political turmoil when the pandemic hit
8. We are mired in piss and shit because of you.
9. The wheels sank deeper into the mire.
10. 14 Grant was still mired in the mud before impregnable Vicksburg.
11. I sink in deep mire, where there is no foothold.
12. Yes, even so-called wealthy nations are mired in difficulties.
13. Mire Secondly, Pache's style does not lend any air of the dynamism needed to steer Bull out of its current mire.
14. My name had been dragged through the mire .
15. Synonyms for Alluviums include alluvion, sludge, ooze, mires, muck, mud, silt, slime, sediment and slush
16. ‘Goya’s Mired Men Fighting with Cudgels’ was dragged out of me
17. And its waters keep tossing up seaweed and mire.
18. I sank in deep mire; I felt no standing.
19. The Party sank deeper into the mire of conflict.
20. Bemire may be defined as “To drag through, encumber with, or fix in, the mire”, “To soil with mire; dirty or muddy: Bemired clothing” and “To cause (an object or person) to sink in mire: a Bemired wagon ”.
21. To soil with mire; dirty or muddy: Bemired clothing
22. To soil with mire; dirty or muddy: Bemired clothing.
23. Trample them in the mire under the German heel.
24. I will talk you through the mire and help you decide.
25. It was a hopeless task, we were slowly sinking in the mire.