confused
The most common intensifier for 'confused'.
Indicates a very high degree of confusion.
To be entirely confused, with no understanding.
A common, slightly informal synonym for 'completely confused'.
A common and soft way to say 'slightly confused'.
Indicates a small amount of confusion.
Means completely confused, often implying that the confusion is a result of a process or explanation.
Used to state that someone's confusion is easy to see or understand.
Synonymous with 'clearly confused', emphasizing that the confusion is apparent to any observer.
Indicates a moderate degree of confusion.
A strong, emphatic word for 'completely confused', often used for dramatic effect.
Describes a process of becoming more and more confused over time.
Indicates a slight, not very strong, feeling of confusion.
Emphasizes that the confusion is real and not pretended.
Describes being confused for only a short time.
Indicates a strong and complex state of confusion, often about a situation or information.
Similar to 'horribly confused', expresses a high degree of confusion with a negative connotation.
Indicates that two or more people are confused to the same degree.
Suggests being so confused that there is no hope of understanding.
An emphatic and slightly informal way to say 'completely confused', stressing the negative feeling.
The most common and direct way to state the condition of being confused.
A common, informal way to say 'become confused'.
To experience the internal sensation of being confused.
To have a facial expression that shows you are confused.
To transition into a state of confusion, often used in more formal contexts.
To appear to be confused, based on observation.
To give the impression of being confused.
To seem confused based on the way one speaks.
To cause someone to become or remain confused.
To continue to be in a state of confusion.
A look on someone's face that shows they are confused.
Similar to 'a confused expression'.
A facial expression of confusion involving furrowing the brows.
Ideas or thinking processes that are unclear and not logical.
A disorderly and complicated mix of things, like wires, ideas, or situations.
Used to specify the topic or subject of the confusion.
Used to specify the agent or cause of the confusion.
Used to specify the immediate cause or trigger of the confusion, often a specific event or statement.