Use "muddle through" in a sentence

1. He managed to muddle through university.

2. 21 He managed to muddle through university.

3. 21 I expect we shall muddle through somehow!

4. " And without much ado We can all muddle through

5. 19 The team managed to muddle through another season.

6. We will muddle through and just play it day by day.

7. They must muddle through in a fog of grumble and contempt.

8. 30 They are in trouble, but I expect they will muddle through.

9. 5 We will muddle through and just play it day by day.

10. It's a muddle, lass; everything is a muddle.

11. And it’s really Confusingto muddle through both of the PR campaigns that have been going on

12. Bumble definition, to bungle or blunder awkwardly; muddle: He somehow Bumbled through two years of college

13. 29 I'm afraid I can't help you - you'll just have to muddle through on your own.

14. The report revealed a major bureaucratic muddle.

15. 24 Your room's in a real muddle.

16. 4 The documents were in a muddle.

17. 11 The report revealed a major bureaucratic muddle.

18. 9 My thoughts are all in a muddle.

19. 18 My papers are all in a muddle.

20. 17 I wish you wouldn't muddle my books.

21. Such questions have led to a bewildering muddle.

22. This can help us to live our life in a more meaningful way rather than simply to muddle through or waste it.

23. To confuse or muddle: to Becloud the issues

24. 11 He got himself into a frightful muddle.

25. 14 He got himself into a frightful muddle.

26. 3 The papers are all in a muddle.

27. There was a bureaucratic muddle over his appointment.

28. 16 We muddle along from day to day.

29. There followed a long period of confusion and muddle.

30. 13 There was a muddle over the theatre tickets.

31. 2 I often muddle up Richard with his brother.

32. 22 The judge made a muddle of the case.

33. I like her but she's a bit muddle-headed.

34. Our accountant finally managed to sort out the muddle.

35. 15 Stop talking,(www.Sentencedict.com) or you'll muddle me completely.

36. 12 There was a muddle over our hotel accommodation.

37. 23 There was a bureaucratic muddle over his appointment.

38. 8 There followed a long period of confusion and muddle.

39. 25 All my files have got into a muddle somehow.

40. 10 Our accountant finally managed to sort out the muddle.

41. 20 The more you talk, the more you muddle me.

42. 27 I've arranged the books alphabetically so don't muddle them up.

43. 15 I've arranged the books alphabetically so don't muddle them up.

44. Muddle sugar, mint[Sentencedict], and lime juice in a rocks glass.

45. 7 I got into an awful muddle with my tax forms.

46. 6 I'm in such a muddle, I'd completely forgotten you were coming today.

47. The picture that emerges is one of muddle, intrigue, greed and occasionally altruism.

48. 38 synonyms for Befuddle: confuse, puzzle, baffle, bewilder, muddle, daze, perplex, mystify, disorient

49. 28 Already, one or two critics have begun to muddle the two names.

50. 26 She was in a muddle; she couldn't even remember what day it was.

51. This book assesses the technological fix for the muddle left by downsizing and reengineering.

52. 24 synonyms for Bemuse: puzzle, stun, confuse, overwhelm, stump, baffle, bewilder, muddle, daze, confound

53. Synonyms for Bemuse include confuse, puzzle, bewilder, muddle, perplex, baffle, confound, addle, flummox and mystify

54. To the world at large It'seemed a glaring example of miscalculation, confusion, timidity, and muddle.

55. Synonyms for Convolute include confuse, cloud, obscure, muddle, muddy, becloud, befog, blur, confound and fog

56. 31 synonyms for Addle: confuse, bewilder, mix up, muddle, perplex, fluster, stupefy, befuddle, fuddle, go

57. 29 Gerald Ford getting into a muddle about what was and wasn't a Warsaw Pact country.

58. It is too valuable a document of human heartbreak and muddle to be scorned or dismissed.

59. Place sugar, chopped rosemary and mint sprig in the bottom of a cocktail shaker. Muddle well.

60. 1 : to muddle or stupefy with or as if with drink … Befuddled with drink all the time.

61. 4 The world of muddle and incoherence, of being seventeen, of home, of unidentified feelings, of unresolved questions.

62. The plan was to go in relays and not to leave the Jonquil unattended, but there was a muddle.

63. In Causal inference, we always need to account for confounders because they introduce correlations that muddle the Causal diagram

64. The Baculum serves the functions of generally protecting the structure of the penis while helping direct sperm to the cervix, but it's certainly not necessary (case in point: we Homo sapiens have had to muddle through somehow without one)

65. Just as the slums, squalor and muddle of towns and cities could be overcome by planning, so could social evils.

66. 2 The unnatural but popular division between righteous and unrighteous anger can get many people in a theological and practical muddle.

67. It tells the story of two half brothers--Bruno, a writer, and Michel, a scientist--who muddle their way through their broken lives, alternately seeking and avoiding relationships with family and lovers, Biding their time at work, and touring the French countryside and …

68. " Arminian Theology is a much-needed book, addressing many of the myths and caricatures about Arminianism that plague and muddle many contemporary theological discussions.

69. Bemuse (v.) "to make utterly confused, put into muse or reverie, muddle, stupefy," from be-+ muse (compare amuse); attested from 1735 but probably older, as Pope (1705) punned on it …

70. Break through synonyms, Break through pronunciation, Break through translation, English dictionary definition of Break through

71. He's British through and through.

72. Carry out verb (Carry out, carried out, carrying out) go through verb (goes through, went through, going through) Did he go through with the treatment? 1; put through verb

73. Apprompt – to borrow – Welter – a confused muddle; a chaotic jumble – Oxythymous – quick-tempered, easily riled women – Elegy – An elegy is a sad poem, usually written to praise and express sorrow for someone who is dead.

74. Apprompt – to borrow – Welter – a confused muddle; a chaotic jumble – Oxythymous – quick-tempered, easily riled women – Elegy – An elegy is a sad poem, usually written to praise and express sorrow for someone who is dead.

75. Through the mist, through the woods through the darkness and the shadows

76. Apprompt – to borrow – Welter – a confused muddle; a chaotic jumble – Oxythymous – quick-tempered, easily riled women – Elegy – An elegy is a sad poem, usually written to praise and express sorrow for someone who is dead.

77. Ablutions can be performed through washing with water, through immersion, or through sprinkling

78. If you’re an Alpinists through and through

79. Dad was a rationalist through and through.

80. You just know it through and through.