Please; don't bemuse me with the facts.
She had a bemuse look on her face while she watched the man juggle. Another good sentence would be, the boy felt bemuse while working on his math homework.
My advice to the court jester was to bemuse the king, and quickly; for his very life depended on it!!
No, the word 'bemuse' is a verb: bemuse, bemuses, bemusing, bemused. The noun forms for the verb to bemuse are bemusement and the gerund, bemusing.
chicken wings and pork fried rice on a silver platter
noHow about: "His response bemused me, it was bemusing."Bemuse is a verb that means to puzzle, confuse, or bewilder (someone): "her bemused expression".
bemuse
"bemuse" is the synonym for dazed
confound, confuse, puzzle, baffle, perplex, mystify, flummox, bemuse
Synonyms for stun include bemuse, fog, floor, overwhelm, surprise, and confound.
The word 'bemusement' is a noun based on the transitive verb 'to bemuse'.Much to the bemusement of the crowd, the magician seemed to disappear.We stifled our bemusement as a cat walked slowly across the stage behind the lecturer.
Yesterday, while seeing a cliffhanger movie, I was bemused as I was not able to decipher the end of the story which was so abrupt. The candidate seemed bemused by all the questions, but he kept a smile on his face. The old man bemused me with his babbling. I watched in anger at his bemused expression at my problem. I was bemused by the crowd's laughter
It is the first sentence of a paragraph which is the topic sentence.