No. A conundrum is a riddle or puzzle, especially a complex one. A more specific use of the word is "a riddle that is answered by a pun."
The term "malaprop" or "malapropism" is applied to words that are used out of context because they sound like other words (e.g. a sneak in the grass).
In Yiddish, "all mixed up" can be expressed as "אַלל מיקסד אַרויף" (all mixed up) or "אַלל פֿאַרשפערט" (all farshpert). The term "פֿאַרשפּאַרן" (farshparn) can also imply a sense of being confused or mixed up. The context may influence the choice of words, but these phrases capture the essence of being in a disordered state.
A mixed number is made up of a whole number and a fraction.
Well, darling, that mixed-up word is "nylon willow." Looks like someone had a little too much fun with the alphabet soup! Next time, maybe stick to regular words unless you're trying to stump a spelling bee champion.
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4%
Conundrums, enigmas, unknowns, posers, teasers...
Jumbled words are words, but the letters are mixed up.
mixed up
mixed up
Conundrums are word puzzles.
Two words that have meanings similar to problems are predicaments and conundrums. Troubles and worries might also qualify.
There is Mariella Mysteries: The Cupcake Conundrum by Kate Pankhurst. But the Encyclopedia Brown books would also have conundrums.
I think you might mean an anagram, where letters from a word are mixed up to form a new one
Norm Crosby
No, the word "mixed up" does not need a hyphen when used as a phrasal adjective or verb. It is typically written as two separate words. However, if you use it as a compound adjective before a noun, you might see it hyphenated as "mixed-up," such as in "a mixed-up situation."
It doesn't mean anything...he just mixed up radom words
Mixed-breed dog Mixed-up Mixed-race Pitch-in Pitch-shifting Pitch-black Pitch-pine knot