We dozed, never quite letting ourselves go, ready to jump into confused wakefulness, anticipating action of some kind. |
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He is a very caring, thoughtful, generous man, so I get confused by the extremes. |
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The confused situation gave dissenting sects the opportunity to establish themselves. |
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Although misandry is sometimes confused with misanthropy, the terms are not interchangeable, since the latter refers to the hatred of humanity. |
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Our narrator starts the record slightly haywire, a confused youth maxing out on the raw nerves of bitterness and hope. |
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Often seborrheic keratoses are confused with moles and even with viral warts. |
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The condition of barber's itch itself is often confused with multiple ingrown hairs that often occur naturally in people. |
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It is unfortunate that the gender of the noun, being masculine, is confused with the intent of the word, which is neutral. |
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This may be considered military law which should not be confused with the term martial law. |
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All too often, quadriplegia is innocently confused with paraplegia, a condition where only the lower limbs are affected. |
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But no one was confused about which of the 18 candidates on the ballot paper to vote for. |
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They're confused as to whether one follows the panels across or down, in what order the word balloons are sequenced, and so forth. |
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It is also know as pot marigold, but should not to be confused with the common garden marigolds of the Tagetes species. |
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Consumers may well be confused by the technical terminology surrounding lighting. |
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The gem scintillates a confused yellowish-green, before the yellow fades from it and it appears as an emerald. |
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Simplistic analyses of changes in vegetation cover probably confused natural temporal variability with long-term degradation. |
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During her visits with her mother, there's a suggestion that Ingrid is still somehow controlling or manipulating her confused child. |
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So tame were those attempts that either effort might have been confused with a back pass. |
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Jude nodded and smiled confidently, even if he was slightly confused by Stephen's backhanded compliment. |
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I smiled back at him, a little confused, but followed the direction of his gaze. |
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He pulled the hair out of my eyes and looked at me with those confused baby blues. |
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Not to be confused with tartrate, creatine titrate works along the same lines as effervescent creatine products, minus the bubbles. |
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If you set a tape recorder running at a noisy party you would most likely hear something resembling a confused babble. |
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To pretty much anyone this lot represents a bewildering, tangled, confused maze of information. |
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Chapter 3 examines the confused tangle of existing and proposed pipelines, which is far too complex to summarize here. |
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He shuffled back along the ground away from her, scared and confused by what was happening. |
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His voice sounded more than just confused, it was tired and irritated too, mad at the world. |
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I was now thoroughly confused, and felt terribly provincial when I said I'd rather sleep on the sofa, if it was all the same to him. |
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If you've been scared off Atkins, confused by the latest macrobiotic diet or are fed up with protein shakes, don't despair. |
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Although part of the same happy pastry family, the French macaron should not be confused with the coconut macaroon. |
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Rather you want to throw out a lifeline to the subjects, who are clearly confused and all at sea. |
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One minute he can be very lucid and at other times he's confused about who he is and who his children are. |
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You know, the middle class and the lower class, they're not confused about this issue. |
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It showed that she was finding it very hard to be assertive, and her son was confused by his mother's contradictory signals. |
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His actions had confused her entirely, and in the end, she had let fear rule her actions. |
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Successive tight close-ups of the star's rugged features reveal expressions that are less tensely pensive than muddled and confused. |
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Sometimes the cooks got confused and served it two weeks in a row, which was a sharp disappointment. |
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So now I'm back home and a bit confused as to whether my visit was effective or not. |
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Now drivers have been left confused as to whether they can still park in the bay. |
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All I came up with was a series of brain achingly long reports that left me more confused than when I started. |
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One of the conditions that can be confused with persistent vegetative state is locked-in syndrome. |
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Well, I've only done judo until now so I was a little confused by the leg locks. |
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Albanians have often been confused with other ethnic groups, such as Greeks or Armenians. |
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Folio numbers often exist in both Arabic and Roman numerals and are a bit confused. |
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The first part of the text is confused, but we are told that the powerful oath was entrusted to the archangel Michael. |
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I didn't have to fake the confused arch of my eyebrows or the incredulous glint to my stare. |
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And I'm just as confused and scared as the rest of us about what to believe and who to listen to. |
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He is a great actor and seeing him go from lost rogue to confused son to driven billionnaire to a conflicted hero is a blast. |
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This rabbit is often confused with the shrub hare, rock rabbits and the Cape hare that also live in the Central Karoo. |
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I spoke to two senior players last night and it is apt to say that they are confused. |
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As the choir filed onto the risers, Sister Nancy, my dear partner, leaned over to Sister Mariah with a confused look on her face. |
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She gasped, momentarily confused by the apparition that appeared before her. |
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Wilson Cruz is respectable as the sexually confused, morally stable, and guilt ridden member of the trio. |
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Some people are confused by what appear to be contradictory positions in libertarianism. |
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If you are confused, lethargic, or have a fever, someone should take you to the hospital. |
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As the year developed after the looting, reports both highlighted the damage and confused the issue. |
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I was a little confused because his statements weren't really answers, but more like walks around an answer, like a politician would do. |
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Sociologists define anomie as a state where normal values are confused, unclear or not present. |
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Some travellers were confused by conflicting announcements made on the platform by public address systems. |
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Heartburn can be confused with other kinds of pain, especially angina pectoris, so you need to explore its specific features carefully. |
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The androids and robots were confused and scampered down corridors, knocking into things. |
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This new facility is not to be confused with the existing coach service available only to reserved seat passengers. |
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Frail and sallow, he appeared confused as he attempted to answer the anchorwoman's questions. |
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I have read all the layette information but I still get confused as too how many to get. |
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My mother was in turns warm and distant, yielding in me both a confused sense of worth and an independent individualist streak. |
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Enchanted by the warmth of her smile, Brian suddenly felt confused by an unexpected rush of amorous desire. |
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The story line traces a confused, presumably amnesiac character through several episodes. |
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Ordinary forgetfulness that emerges after a trauma must not be confused with amnesia for the trauma. |
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She gathers her things and leaves the hospital, followed by the Doctor, who in his confused state latches on to someone he recognizes. |
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Some folks also recommend ammonia in the water bottle, but make sure you don't get confused and take a sip. |
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The patient may be disoriented and appear confused, but reorientation often is possible. |
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All this after I had the commonsense to slow to a halt amid a growing pack of confused motorists. |
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I was a little confused and don't know whether that was professionalism or pure amateurism. |
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If the government is relying on polls to gauge public support, it will be very confused. |
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As noted earlier, this ideologically confused lampoon seems unsure of its target. |
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The larval stage of the green lacewing is sometimes confused with the larval stage of lady beetles or ladybugs. |
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Nikki looked confused, but a light made her eyes flash and I immediately regretted my choice of words. |
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Pharmacists tell us that the heartburn and ulcer drug Zantac can easily be confused with the sound-alike anti-anxiety agent Xanax. |
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Edella regards me quizzically, but I just stare right back at her with an equally confused expression. |
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Asked to choose between the Kurds and the Turks we might well become confused. |
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The film takes a refreshingly realistic approach to its often confused characters. |
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If you get confused while reading, you can refer to the glossary to put everything in proper context. |
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There is a world of difference between fact and opinion, and sometimes the two can get easily confused. |
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But the real scene-stealer here is Ken Stott, whose ruthless Kennel-boss Good Joe is both workably evil and believably confused. |
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Many small businesses and independent traders can get confused by regulations and red tape. |
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You don't like to play sports and you get confused easily since you like to do word association in your head when someone is talking. |
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This was negligence pure and simple, confused by an ill-fitting and woolly disguise of nuisance. |
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I knitted my brow, a bit confused as to the direction this conversation was taking. |
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Bless him, by this point it was about quarter to two in the morning and he was knackered so I forgive him for being a bit confused. |
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For the briefest moment he was confused, and then recognition dawned on him. |
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A realistic hologram of a rag-clad senior with a white ponytail and long alabaster whiskers examined about the room with a confused countenance. |
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Yuntardi was confused when his daughter Sekar, a first grade elementary pupil, asked him to register her in a school tennis course. |
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The Bombay High Court's directive reallotting jurisdiction of the City Civil and Sessions Court judges has confused lawyers as well as litigants. |
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He was readmitted to hospital 4 days later, profoundly confused as a result of staphylococcal septicaemia. |
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She passed me two bags of coca-cola, and took my money, leaving me standing, slightly confused, beside a train ready to depart. |
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The poor reader must be as confused as Media Watch about who has done what to whom. |
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The only thing expressed in this election was a cry for help from a confused and lost nation, desperate to keep up appearances. |
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But now it is clear that, yet again, entertainment is being confused with education. |
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Perhaps our ancestors got confused with the songs of humpback whales amplified by the keels of their vessels. |
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He rattled something off in his native language that had everyone but Miliar confused. |
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Unfortunately, the carotid pulsations in the neck can easily be confused with jugular pulsations. |
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You may be confused about what way to vote today, given the welter of claim and counterclaim over the last month. |
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Anger and frustration radiate from a man who rarely had faced cause to be angry or frustrated, and he is almost confused by the situation. |
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At least half the audience walked out before the end, irritated and confused. |
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Jon has too much value cos he can blind them with science and they are confused by him. |
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She then turned her head to look at Josh, who wore a very confused expression. |
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In our political and legal culture, any number of issues bearing upon the common weal get confused with issues of rights. |
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The gray-furred Child laughed, cavorting around the confused guards like a court jester in a medieval kingdom. |
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His soft brown eyes slowly drifted to meet my very confused and puzzled gaze and with a simple wave of the hand gestured for me to take a seat. |
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I was first confused, then enraged, as he bobbed in the waves repeating his taunting question. |
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You arrived confused, anxious to quench your curiosity at one of South Eastern Connecticut's top liberal arts colleges. |
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Given that this includes accountability to the public, his comments seem more than a little confused. |
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He was very confused, but then, when light dawned, he took much glee in pointing out I'd paid the exact same amount as I would have before my haggling. |
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I would say that they were the most addled, confused, stoned, and addicted people I have seen, at least at the ER level. |
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Critics and listeners were left confused whether Paisley was apologizing for his apparel or justifying it with his bizarre lyrics. |
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Distraught, confused and ashamed, both men broke down in the courtroom, weeping like children and begging for forgiveness. |
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Bart gets confused and angry, he gets bullied, he experiences the manic highs and lows that come with being a child. |
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But the boycott measure is also confused, chiefly because of its bouillabaisse of motivations. |
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I'm sure the residents are confused because of government waffling. |
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I was so amazed and my eyes so confused that finally I had to pull off the freeway and creep slowly into the parking lot of a service station abutting a field. |
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I start with The Graduate and how the sensitive, open-hearted, vulnerable, confused person can be a cinematic hero. |
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It began when a classmate raised her hand and stated that she was confused about the facts of the case. |
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The condition left her confused, physically weak and exhausted. |
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The Chinese have come to expect this sort of confused reaction, CNS Imports principal Steaven Chen says. |
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The principal task of the courts will continue to be to ensure that, whatever the range of admissible evidence, coincidence is not confused with proof. |
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The boy feels rejected and confused, and then hits on a Christmas morning solution, delivering a penguin mate for his penguin. |
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Nancy's specifics regarding the storage of the starter confused me. |
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This theory holds even more truth today because with the amount of mixed and confusing messages regarding health and fitness, most consumers are confused. |
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This data point, which is not be confused with the more popular ISM purchasing managers index, is a relatively crude one. |
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Anyone who's genuinely confused as to how a pro-Social Security administration might make the numbers add up can look at any number of plans liberal wonks have put together. |
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This is a place of high anxiety, a labyrinth where the protagonists become so confused by being mistaken for someone else that insanity threatens. |
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Dixon was presumably brought in to prove that the sounds could be easily confused. |
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Instead of creating new cell material, the cell is confused and replicates the virus, which then replicates itself and spreads throughout the body. |
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In some ways, they represent the electorate that constantly confused group of people who understand that to solve problems, you have to be part of the participating solution. |
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For one thing, there is the concern that some visitors might mistake the color reproduction for an original and thus be confused or even cheated as paying clients. |
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The Angry Penguins had no coherent political outlook and the Boyd family circle espoused a confused mixture of liberal humanism and religious pacifism. |
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From confused childhood and angst-ridden teen years to life in repressed rural Ireland during the 1970s, Joseph ploughs on, always looking in from the outside. |
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The course of the rivulet of wine, from which a Bacchante is scooping a jugful, is confused, perhaps through the deterioration of the paint or through inept restoration. |
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The boy was lethargic and confused but seemed to recognise his mother. |
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The commander will hold the rank of lieutenant general but should not be confused with the supreme commander, who is chosen by Parliament only during wartime. |
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No, says the confused C.K, who expected the figurative nature of his statement to be obvious. |
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Activists framed state right-to-die initiatives, senators sponsored bills banning assisted suicide, and courts began issuing an unending series of deeply confused rulings. |
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Mildly aphasic and often confused, he could no longer defend himself. |
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Attempts to mimic the eating habits of our foraging relatives results from a confused understanding of our history. |
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The reports in both the Western and the Arabic press are confused. |
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Meanwhile, on the other end, US Airways seems genuinely confused by their gaff. |
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He listened, a little confused, trying to catch up, while he pulled off his galoshes to reveal tan suede moccasin boots. |
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We get confused because both cicadas and locust emerge periodically. |
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Some people are a little confused by this latest trend, wondering what all the fuss is about and why it's becoming the next best thing since sliced bread. |
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Not to be confused with Lawn Tennis, which was developed around 1874, Real or Royal Tennis is a far more ancient game, originating in France in the 12th century. |
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The position of Lord High Steward of England, not to be confused with the Lord Steward, a court functionary, is the first of the Great Officers of State. |
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A big number of many-colored flares, both friendly and enemy, that were fired from the ground, as well as fires in drop areas, confused the assembly signals. |
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And then when they arrive in Kerry, their problems are compounded as they're confronted with confused and disjointed signage that could send them astray for another hour. |
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The filmmakers travel to shanghai, where locals are left confused by pictures of the dish. |
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Nothing here is obscured or confused by authorial partiality. |
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Louis looked startled and confused for a moment, but recovered and slapped me heartily on the shoulder. |
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He looks over confused as a dark-haired girl lies at his feet, she rubs her head a few times, and pulls her hair back to reveal her baby-blue eyes. |
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All the hullabaloo confused the neophyte rockers, who had only been a band for two years and were searching for their own voice. |
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Bewildered adolescents, many of them accompanied by equally confused guardians, spill out into the hallway. |
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This is not to be confused with utopianism, nor with a doctrine of manifest destiny, whether national or global, nor with a theocratic theory of the state. |
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In flight, European Starlings can be confused with Purple Martins, but the narrower wings, forked tails, and typical swallow flight of martins distinguish the two. |
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If not already scared away by the price, most undergraduates will be confused and overwhelmed by the mass of material and the lack of background information. |
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As images go, both play to our massively confused consciousness. |
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The horse turned his head, regarding his master with confused eyes. |
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And there were suggestions that his age had gotten to him, as he appeared confused at a final campaign stop on Tuesday. |
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By the way, one second of arc is not to be confused as a measure of time! |
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He steered the client out in the corridor, where the poor man, clearly confused and with no verbal skills, stood for a few minutes staring mawkishly around. |
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And then he left as casually as he had arrived, leaving us behind, unkidnapped and confused. |
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I was unsettled by the sudden outburst, and since I didn't know what to do I just stood there, confused. |
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Later though, after about two weeks in untime, Finn began to get confused, and my job changed to simply keeping him straight. |
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These scats are black and twisted and can be confused with those of the fox, except that they reputedly have a floral odor. |
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Some medieval chroniclers referred to the Geats as Goths and confused the two. |
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The deep plexus or fourth layer is a complicated mazework, frequently confused with certain adjacent structures. |
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The blotchy black mark she impresses on my hand will still be there tomorrow morning, a confused barcode, unsure of what exactly it encodes. |
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However, it must not be confused with the traditional Asturian cider as it is a sparkling cider more in the way of French ciders. |
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Other similarly named characters may be confused or conflated with the Welsh Coel. |
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My confused senses received a dull roar of pounding feet and dinning voices as the herald of victory. |
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Asexuality with the ability to experience romantic attraction should not be confused with demisexuality, which is somewhat similar. |
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They can be eaten with sweet or savoury toppings and are sometimes confused with Bath buns, which are smaller, round, very sweet and very rich. |
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Since dating behaviors are derived from the prostitution model, date rape, instead of being a crime of violence,... The date rapist is confused. |
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She and Henri had some kind of cyberdeath pact. If one didn't come back, the other one wouldn't. It was all very perverse, and confused. |
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Bachelor's degrees should not be confused with baccalaureate qualifications, which derive their name from the same root. |
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Any contact with cash will snap their spell and leave the wizard naked and confused. |
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This statement has confused later translators into thinking that Edmund was of continental Old Saxon origin. |
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When Mary died and Elizabeth I became queen in 1558, the religious situation in England was confused. |
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What if the signals are confused and both the doctrines of respect for and condescension towards other moralities is preached? |
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We are not confused children and if we were then let these childs be free, for life is short and every bit of a smile extends life one more day. |
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Capacity for bursts of torque should not be confused with field weakening capability. |
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This date is sometimes confused with the public availability of the first web servers, which had occurred months earlier. |
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Ships losses should not be confused with crew losses from disease, deprivation, accident, combat and desertion. |
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The conquistadors found new animal species, but reports confused these with monsters such as giants, dragons, or ghosts. |
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The name Velha Goa should not be confused with another former Goan capital Goa Velha, lying some villages away in the south. |
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The Demarcation Line is often confused with 38th parallel, but as can be seen in the image of the map, the two are not the same. |
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A medium is just that, a medium, and should not be confused for the message. |
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The spiciness of black pepper is due to the chemical piperine, not to be confused with the capsaicin characteristic of chili peppers. |
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Sometimes the distinction between auxiliary verbs and light verbs is overlooked or confused. |
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Aspect is often confused with the closely related concept of tense, because they both convey information about time. |
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These should not be confused with the related, albeit distinct, modern British grammar schools. |
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The Semitic genitive should not be confused with the pronominal possessive suffixes that exist in all the Semitic languages. |
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Gestuno is not to be confused with the separate and unrelated sign language Signuno, which is essentially a Signed Exact Esperanto. |
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It ought surely to be possible to say that an argument is confused, or an analysis flawed, without denying the justice of the cause they support. |
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Idioms are also not to be confused with proverbs, which are simple sayings that express a truth based on common sense or practical experience. |
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A prepositional phrase should not be confused with a sequence formed by the particle and the direct object of a phrasal verb. |
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This, however, should not be confused with the name of the church itself, as it is a distinct body relating to church governance. |
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By such subtle means were Cranmer's purposes further confused, leaving it for generations to argue over the precise theology of the rite. |
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It should not be confused with a temple name, by which many leaders are known. |
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The term should not be confused with Order of Council, which is made in the name of the Council without royal assent. |
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By the late 1950s to early 1960s, the common law of mens rea was widely acknowledged to be a slippery, vague, and confused mess. |
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Quality of life should not be confused with the concept of standard of living, which is based primarily on income. |
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However, this invasion was repelled by the English in a confused naval action. |
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Impeachment with respect to political office should not be confused with witness impeachment. |
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The two are often confused for each other due to the similarity of their names. |
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An improvement on CAT Tooling is BT Tooling, which looks similar and can easily be confused with CAT tooling. |
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Critical reviews of that time demonstrate these two views, along with confused speculation as to the identity of the author. |
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Despite these hierarchies of deities, traditional conceptions of Tao should not be confused with the Western theism. |
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The practice of harvesting peat moss should not be confused with the harvesting of moss peat. |
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The main faces are Dalehead Crags and Great Gable, not to be confused with the fell of that name. |
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It is one of two Rivers Esk in Cumbria, and not to be confused with the Border Esk which flows on the Scottish side of the border. |
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Pyrolytic graphite, and pyrolytic carbon are often confused but are very different materials. |
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Slate is not to be confused with shale, from which it may be formed, or schist. |
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A henge should not be confused with a stone circle within it, as henges and stone circles can exist together or separately. |
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However, just like said bombs, your sexperiences as a fresher can leave you feeling happy one minute and confused the next. |
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She was confused. Now that he had worked himself into a snit he'd be angry if she unmade the bed and did what he wanted. |
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Because it is often confused with psychoanalysis, psychodynamics has at times been considered an outdated and outmoded approach to therapy. |
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Sam is unconscious, filling it, drilling it from every conceivable angle. Lem is awful and Cooper seems confused. Josh shoots too often. |
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The staring spells of autism and typical absence seizures can easily be confused. |
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Often compared and, even, confused with its CBS rival The Munsters, The Addams Family was the most wonderful and weird without a doubt. |
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I do love a good white pizza, but the sauce should never be confused with something that could go with cauliflower cheese. |
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I did a pant audit and was slightly confused to find a pair of size eight tangas in my bottom drawer. |
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I'm confused by the plethora of overpaid England footballers using draconian rulings made by overpaid woolly-minded judges to cover their tracks. |
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Allosaurs, sometimes confused with the Tyrannosaurus rex, were large theropod dinosaurs. |
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Civil parish councils should not be confused with Parochial church councils which administer parishes of the Church of England. |
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However the reality star seemed to be quite confused if the word was spelled as tanorexic or tannerexic. |
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Irredentism should not be confused with claims to overseas colonies, which are not generally considered part of the national homeland. |
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The three books of Meqabyan are not to be confused with the books of Maccabees. |
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At the Siege of Wexford in October, another massacre took place under confused circumstances. |
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Not to be confused with either jelutong or with Hevea brasiliensis that was introduced in later years. |
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Her semi-autobiographical anti-heroine, Anne-Marie, is a 23-year-old Londoner, confused about life, love and what it means to be a woman. |
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The corvina, not to be confused with the California corbina, is one of the sea's four game fish. |
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The marriage age should not be confused with the age of majority or the age of consent, though in some places they may be the same. |
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Oaths may also be confused with vows, but vows are really just a special kind of an oath. |
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Subsequently, in the 10th and 11th centuries, Latin sources routinely confused the Rus' with the extinct East Germanic tribe of Rugians. |
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Knowledge of the events preceding his death is confused because there are two different accounts. |
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The dialects of Swiss German must not be confused with Swiss Standard German, the variety of Standard German used in Switzerland. |
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Thus, francophonie, or the speaking of French, must not be confused with French citizenship or ethnicity. |
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The radiological appearance of diffuse nodular type of BAC may be confused with miliary tuberculosis and pulmonary metastatic nodules. |
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The free city of Cologne must not be confused with the Archbishopric of Cologne which was a state of its own within the Holy Roman Empire. |
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She feels a bit jumbly and confused inside, but giving marks out of ten she definitely rates it higher than Gordon's rather slobbery snogs. |
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The proper noun when spoken can be confused for the common noun. |
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But the Kabbalists confused the powers in Heaven by replacing Suria with Rusia and thus Hitler instead invaded Russia. |
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It is not to be confused with industrial archaeology, which concentrates on industrial sites from more recent periods. |
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The term petroglyph should not be confused with petrograph, which is an image drawn or painted on a rock face. |
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A solitary tophus which is seen as a soft tissue mass without inflammatory joint disease can be confused with neoplastic conditions. |
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I think he sometimes got it confused, particularly in his storytelling. |
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Barrie, confused by what happened, fired five shots in the air warning the public not to report what had happened to the police. |
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Hereditary hemochromatosis can be confused with other arthropathies, especially those that affect the hand joints. |
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But I am totally confused as to what is a yellow-card offence and what is a red-card offence. |
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The militia must not be confused with the volunteer units created in a wave of enthusiasm in the second half of the nineteenth century. |
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In 1063, still immersed in the confused local politics of Northumbria, his popularity apparently plummeted. |
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True independents should not be confused with members of parties without official party status in a legislature. |
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Violence broke out, leading to savage, confused street fighting as both sides attempted to take control of the city. |
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A midden, by definition, contains the debris of human activity, and should not be confused with wind or tide created beach mounds. |
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It was frequently misidentified as or confused with similar species from the genus Primula. |
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Hybrids are commonly known as Norwegian spruce, which should not be confused with the pure species Norway spruce. |
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This helps to distinguish them from palmate newts that have pale unspotted throats, and with which they are often confused. |
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Retinal phakomas or astrocytomas may be confused with retinoblastomas in infants. |
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The Lord Mayor of Bristol, not to be confused with the Mayor of Bristol, is a figurehead elected each May by the city council. |
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The Roman use of the term corn is not to be confused with maize, which did not come to Europe until the discovery of the New World. |
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Many veterans lie in hospitals across the nation, dazed and confused. |
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This is a legally acceptable process and should not be confused with smuggling. |
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But at the same time they portray him as paranoid and apathetic, dull and easily confused. |
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A blockade should not be confused with an embargo or sanctions, which are legal barriers to trade. |
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The River's Edge, despite its strong subject, was confused and conspicuously overtouted. |
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Some of the ships near Oquendo turned with him, others were confused and maintained bearing. |
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The Singelgracht should not be confused with the oldest and most inner canal Singel. |
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It is sometimes confused with Fucus spiralis with which it hybridises and is similar to Fucus serratus. |
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Tuberaleyrodes species are usually found feeding on Lauraceous hosts and are likely to be confused due to intraspecific variations. |
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The taxonomy of gulls is confused by their widespread distribution zones of hybridization leading to geneflow. |
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Neither Tethys oceans should be confused with the Rheic Ocean, which existed to the west of them in the Silurian period. |
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This is, however, not to be confused with the migrants' national backgrounds, which are recorded. |
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When seen from a distance, juveniles can be confused with other cetacean species, such as the false killer whale or Risso's dolphin. |
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Large individuals can be confused with fin whales, unless the fin whale's asymmetrical head coloration is clearly seen. |
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This poeticised periplus resulted in a confused amateur's account of the coastal regions of the known world. |
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This is called rhinophyma and is not to be confused with the kind of redness and swelling on the nose caused by alcoholism. |
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It was found wandering in the desert, confused by the wind, the blowing sands of the barchan dunes. |
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Sleep driving, not to he confused with drowsy driving, has been recently added to the lexicon of sleep medicine and phenomena of sleepwalking. |
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Referred to as a bass fiddle, contrabass, string bass or bull fiddle, the double bass is often confused with its close relative the cello. |
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They are not to be confused with the 70s folk rock band Thorin Eichenschild. |
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It was around this time that she changed her name to Sherene Davis in order to avoid being confused with Welsh folk singer Mary Hopkin. |
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The term has the same origin, but is not to be confused with 'Cathay', an alternative name for China. |
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She'd confused Sam's attentions with real feelings, and now she was just another notch on his bedpost. |
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The Goats' bleat is so consistent that it is sometimes confused with a recorded goat sound. |
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She is sometimes confused with Gwenllian ferch Gruffudd, who lived two centuries earlier. |
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Instead of clear knowledge of its meaning, this gesture prompts a series of confused nonexplanations. |
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Calman Plus should not be confused with full fiscal autonomy, although neither concept has been definitively defined. |
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One confused festgoer offers money for brew, but the sixtyish volunteer waves it off. |
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He was confused, half elated, half disappointed, and had not his wits about him. |
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Tendovaginitis stenosans and Morbus Raynaud also must not be confused with true rheumatism. |
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Historically, the term shire is somewhat misleading, as it must not be confused with an English county. |
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The decision so confused Parliament, that Howe was accused by Tories on both sides of the Atlantic of treason. |
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