Synonyms:befuddled, bewildered, dazed, discombobulated*,flustered, fuzzy, muddled, perplexed, puzzled,stupefied, thrown
LIKE
confused, puzzled, dazed, bemused, befuddled
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
A Swear word = A word considered taboo and impolite or offensive. Flip is -not- a swear word. I was bemused that someone had answered "yes". I'd very much like to understand how the word "flip" can be taboo, impolite, or offensive.
Superb is another word for excellent. Superb is another word for excellent.
The word "bemused" is an adjective.
LIKE
confused, puzzled, dazed, bemused, befuddled
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
noHow about: "His response bemused me, it was bemusing."Bemuse is a verb that means to puzzle, confuse, or bewilder (someone): "her bemused expression".
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.
Not really. Bemused means to find something to smile about. She was bemused by the dog trying and trying but failing to reach the turkey on the counter. Befuddled means having trouble figuring out something. He was befuddled with some words on the day's crossword puzzle.
A Swear word = A word considered taboo and impolite or offensive. Flip is -not- a swear word. I was bemused that someone had answered "yes". I'd very much like to understand how the word "flip" can be taboo, impolite, or offensive.
It comes from Faulkner's " Rose for Emily"
woozy giddy, faint, light-headed, reeling, shaky, wobbly, off balance, confused, dazzled, bewildered, muddled, bemused, dazed, disorientated
absent, absent-minded, abstracted, distrait, faraway, inattentive, preoccupied.
Yes, she is. Herparents are bothdentists and slightly bemused by her oddness.