You can bewilder someone if you make a weird face.
"The obtuse and unusual words used by the debaters would often bewilder the audience." "The criminal's many aliases and disguises were designed to bewilder the authorities."
Amaze, baffle, mislead, bewilder, startle.
The word origin of bewilder shows us that the prefix "be-" (thoroughly) was added to the word "wilder" (to lead or go astray). Wilder is not a word that we currently use, but you could probably still call "be" a prefix.
No. Bewilder is a verb. The adverb form could be "bewilderingly."
To confuse or bewilder. To make obscure or unclear.
a compound sentence having a word bewilder?
You can bewilder someone if you make a weird face.
"The obtuse and unusual words used by the debaters would often bewilder the audience." "The criminal's many aliases and disguises were designed to bewilder the authorities."
confuse
The teacher intentionally created a math problem to bewilder his students. The sly fox had taken great pains to bewilder the persistent hound. Will wispy Willa bewilder the wilder instincts of the wily man?
The definition of the work 'bewilder' is to cause someone to become confused. The confusion is usually the result of presenting the person with too many choices.
Amaze, baffle, mislead, bewilder, startle.
To confuse is to bewilder, to muddle the thinking processes.
The past tense of "bewilder" is "bewildered."
The word flummox means to perplex (someone) greatly or bewilder someone.
to flummox someone is to confuse or bewilder them :D