Whereas, if you discombobulate your predator, you confuse them ... Confuse them, yeah.
|
|
But just as it is a mistake to confuse courtesy with courage, it is a mistake to confuse anger with strength.
|
|
"He was using this as another tactic of manipulation to confuse Lauren and to confuse anybody that might be on to him," Brophy said.
|
|
We confuse him with the truly engagé Enlightenment and Romantic writers who came long afterward, as they came to confuse his briny Bordeaux with their winey one.
|
|
If two Blossoms could confuse Archie and Jason for a few moments, while knowing the latter so personally, it stands to reason a complete stranger could also confuse the two.
|
|
Just make sure you don't confuse the two — o.b.
|
|
Her question might confuse — maybe even baffle — some readers.
|
|
Confundo — used to confuse opponents Here's an easy one.
|
|
And the plaintiff might surprise — and, frankly, confuse — you.
|
|
But subsequent laws altered this principle just enough to confuse.
|
|
It's important, Scharrer says, not to confuse healing with forgiveness.
|
|
Trump should not confuse partisan loyalty with love for him.
|
|
But don't confuse a bull market for increased brain power.
|
|
Fake complaints likely do pollute and confuse the real ones.
|
|
"It's very easy to confuse activity with productivity," says Ferriss.
|
|
"We should not confuse immigration and migration," he told CNBC.
|
|
And if your partner sends signals that confuse you, stop.
|
|
It's understandable that people would confuse LinkedIn and their resume.
|
|
Or they'll confuse Eastern Standard Time and Eastern Daylight Time.
|
|
It's confusing, and I think it'll also confuse other users.
|
|
The results confuse and make anxious kids and parents alike.
|
|
Honor feelings, but try not to confuse them with facts.
|
|
Officials hope that the removable dick will confuse potential robbers.
|
|
Because to confuse silence for weakness is a terrible mistake.
|
|
And don't confuse desire with entitlement around your filmmaking either.
|
|
Lawmakers must be careful not to confuse redress with revenge.
|
|
If we write "room" it will probably confuse the audience.
|
|
In this debate, we should not confuse objectives and strategies.
|
|
They also want to confuse offenses with movement and disguise.
|
|
Second, don't let the Islamic State confuse the security apparatus.
|
|
We were trying to confuse them and slip him out.
|
|
It is also important not to confuse correlation with causation.
|
|
" He added, "These things confuse the drivers and the media.
|
|
"Don't let this investigation confuse you," Sanders said on CNN.
|
|
"I was just trying to maybe confuse him," Correa said.
|
|
But am I posturing a certain way to confuse you?
|
|
Too many players in this space confuse product with promotion.
|
|
It's important not to confuse fill power with fill weight.
|
|
His words tend to confuse and inflame, rather than clarify.
|
|
Many people confuse receptive libido with a lack of libido.
|
|
But don't confuse Japanese style with minimalism, says Yuka Morihata.
|
|
They confuse they're prey with the sound that they make.
|
|
Their aim is as much to confuse as to convince.
|
|
She explains that working in bed can confuse your brain.
|
|
But many will deliberately confuse the is with the ought.
|
|
Finally, don't confuse patient engagement tactics with patient engagement strategy.
|
|
One should not confuse sharp eyes with a sharp tongue.
|
|
However, remember not to confuse optimism with happiness, Rozanski says.
|
|
You don't want to confuse people or make them uncomfortable.
|
|
This seemed to confuse the USCIS official handling the case.
|
|
Rather, it's his ability to confuse and distract from them.
|
|
" It doesn't help that people often confuse "server" with "servant.
|
|
Swisher: Why confuse — Smith: Well, I can answer that question.
|
|
Pundits and politicians often confuse analytical findings with moral judgments.
|
|
They confuse our relationship to what we thought was familiar.
|
|
Now, I think people confuse ... There's net neutrality with competition.
|
|
How easy is it to confuse a gun with a Taser?
|
|
Men confuse me, but I am also so familiar with them.
|
|
"I think some people confuse unconditional love with spoiling," she explained.
|
|
It's easy, at first, to confuse implantation bleeding with your period.
|
|
" Crow explained the ideology this way: "Don't confuse legality and morality.
|
|
People often confuse Impossible Project with a far more famous company.
|
|
But we mustn't confuse the use of technology with its creation.
|
|
Ads that are designed to look like news could confuse readers.
|
|
That makes it easy to confuse non-experts with inaccurate information.
|
|
How easy is it to confuse a gun for a Taser?
|
|
It's easy to confuse this contrast with genuine independence from party.
|
|
However, when considering political parties, let's not confuse legality with legitimacy.
|
|
It's enough to confuse anyone but the most die-hard fans.
|
|
The study authors warned readers not to confuse association with causation.
|
|
And there is little X-ray background to confuse them with.
|
|
At times the wealth of detail threatens to confuse the reader.
|
|
These shoestring imitation movies confuse viewers looking for genuine Hollywood blockbusters.
|
|
"Wait I'm confuse now ?!" she tweeted, before deleting her first tweet.
|
|
But when Chicken Little Republicans confuse the hyperbolic and apocalyptic for
|
|
If you peoples is being easily confuse, you be stopping here.
|
|
Words can also be used to deceive us, to confuse us.
|
|
Strong light off to one side seemed to confuse the camera.
|
|
But people confuse the product from the industry with pornography itself.
|
|
"There is zero chance that I would confuse them," she said.
|
|
Finally, a trick that always works is to distract and confuse.
|
|
Sometimes his loose language makes it easy to confuse his targets.
|
|
The stripes may confuse the flies' vision, potentially reducing pesticide use.
|
|
In this, they confuse the broader public's expectations with their own.
|
|
Second, such a deal would confuse executive action with legislative action.
|
|
Visit INSIDER's homepage for more storiesPlease don't confuse Batwoman with Batgirl.
|
|
I think many students in physics labs confuse these two things.
|
|
But I didn't want to confuse the issues at that point.
|
|
Intoxication may cause some to confuse celebratory fireworks with alien aircraft.
|
|
Don't confuse how much you own with how important you are.
|
|
It's that fine line not to confuse anybody's mouth or tastebuds.
|
|
But I worry that these comparisons confuse more than they clarify.
|
|
And Exxon wasn't just trying to confuse the public, Oreskes says.
|
|
Because they confuse demonstrating their mastery of the subject with teaching.
|
|
And our brains tend to confuse familiarity — or salience — with truth.
|
|
But the first thing is not to confuse the two battles.
|
|
"If that question comes up, I'll just confuse them," Eisenhower responded.
|
|
All of which is to say: Don't confuse likelihood and certainty.
|
|
A familiar pose by him, it may confuse some, frustrate others.
|
|
" · "It's tempting to confuse a great company with a great stock.
|
|
America's great mistake was to confuse his political calculation with wisdom.
|
|
The disease looks and sounds like pneumonia, which could confuse doctors.
|
|
"People sometimes confuse being lucky with being good," the source said.
|
|
She gets hurt, but no one would confuse her as frail.
|
|
HONG KONG (Reuters Breakingviews) - Beijing can confuse even politically savvy executives.
|
|
We have allowed the bureaucrats to confuse health insurance with healthcare.
|
|
Such disagreement can confuse investors by weakening the central bank's message.
|
|
Do people confuse you and the other Michelle Williams a lot?
|
|
"A lot of people confuse rats with mice," Dr. Parsons said.
|
|
Policymakers and analysts often seem to confuse IEA's scenarios with predictions.
|
|
So yes, don't confuse teenagers not wanting to die with "saving" us.
|
|
Shirai said the the scheme was too complicated and could confuse markets.
|
|
"The form itself can confuse people as they complete it," said Rigney.
|
|
Authorities said the lighting made the shooter confuse one for the other.
|
|
Just don't confuse that surprise with him being startled by Brogdon's impact.
|
|
Or will they confuse doctors, scare patients, and drive up unnecessary costs?
|
|
Don't confuse this with self-pity, when you dwell on that pain.
|
|
Displays like this further confuse the public about how science is done.
|
|
I compare it to the "Confuse-a-Cat" sketch from Monty Python.
|
|
Shadows cast by objects beyond the picture plane further confuse the images.
|
|
Others contain so much sodium that consumers confuse bloating for muscle mass.
|
|
Longer quotations with, say, small discrepancies in transcription may also confuse it.
|
|
I love Newark, New Jersey and we don't confuse wealth with worth.
|
|
Most large employers confuse this with the public exchange market from HealthCare.
|
|
During flight, ICBMs shed parts and hardware that can confuse an interceptor.
|
|
It's a two-step cancellation process that could potentially confuse some customers.
|
|
"We don't want to confuse treating our seniors as children," Malone said.
|
|
"I, at minimum, think it would confuse them," Zoltan argued to HuffPo.
|
|
Some confuse the trap with the simple logic of catch-up growth.
|
|
Whether many people do in fact confuse Swaziland with Switzerland is unclear.
|
|
Oh — and just to confuse things, this is Adobe's second Project Nimbus.
|
|
And to be specific and not confuse 'good' music with 'cool' music.
|
|
"So many people confuse dead skin with dry skin," Kerr told me.
|
|
"People confuse flashy with great, simple, and easy to use," Wood said.
|
|
"Surrealism exists to confuse, amaze, inspire and entertain," she wrote on Instagram.
|
|
And don't let the pot leaves on her ring fingers confuse you.
|
|
But many people also confuse Ava's father Ryan Phillippe as her sibling.
|
|
As far as the new policy, it serves only to confuse matters.
|
|
Clean energy business leaders cannot confuse environmental advocacy with sound business practices.
|
|
"We think it's impossible to confuse 3nder with Tinder," the company said.
|
|
I'd think it's pretty hard to confuse the two [laughs], but hey.
|
|
Later that month, DeVos appeared to confuse school choice with school segregation.
|
|
Time and again, we confuse punishment with justice, and perpetuate the cycle.
|
|
According to Seventeen, it's simple: The show didn't want to confuse us.
|
|
A thrilling fireworks display can confuse the automated settings on your smartphone.
|
|
Bouler was easy to confuse with Eddie Dow, but he was different.
|
|
Director Alfred Hitchcock once chastised fans not to confuse suspense with surprise.
|
|
Cramer couldn't find a reasonable explanation why Fischer chose to confuse investors.
|
|
In politics, it's important not to confuse spin with strategy or analysis.
|
|
Now, don't confuse that our culture on this subject can get better.
|
|
" Leibniz was inclined "to confuse his own mind with that of God.
|
|
WordPerfect did in the '80s, which is to confuse product with brand.
|
|
Donkey Kong will stop at nothing to confuse and trap our hero.
|
|
"You cannot confuse the First Amendment with a privacy issue," he said.
|
|
But numbers confuse him lately, and so we talk about poetry instead.
|
|
Statements like "Ending economic inequality would mean ending startups" confuse the conversation.
|
|
He seemed to confuse a $1,000 deductible cap with a $1,000 copay.
|
|
Let's not confuse this with some kind of useful periodic digital detox.
|
|
Mohamed-Aggad urged the court not to confuse him with his brother.
|
|
We knew it was busted as people confuse ID verification with endorsement.
|
|
"We just wanted to confuse them as much as possible," Mitchell said.
|
|
There are economic theories that daze and confuse, thanks to their opacity.
|
|
But lies about policy, while they may confuse some voters, aren't enough.
|
|
Take away a right, and call it a choice: That'll confuse them!
|
|
Or do they just confuse the general public or sow unnecessary fear?
|
|
"There is no clarity, and the rapid changes confuse everyone," she said.
|
|
Seattle defensive lineman Michael Bennett conceded his team might confuse some fans.
|
|
If this was meant to confuse allies and adversaries alike, it worked.
|
|
For some, "populist" is too easy to confuse with the right-wing,
|
|
Even supposed "experts" confuse the principle of full congressional representation with statehood.
|
|
"I will not confuse citizens and their demands with thugs," Macron said.
|
|
But don't confuse a lack of moralizing with a lack of interest.
|
|
Store them separately in your phone so you don't confuse the two.
|
|
Please do not confuse my willingness to speak up, however, with fearlessness.
|
|
"Don't confuse intimidation with due process," tweeted MSNBC's Maya Wiley on Monday.
|
|
FreeTaxUSA pricingWhen you visit the homepage, one thing might immediately confuse you.
|
|
But it was all complicated and obscure enough to confuse many people.
|
|
To confuse American values with Putin, who is running a criminal oligarchy.
|
|
"Please don't confuse your Google search with my medical degree," it read.
|
|
"If you can't convince them, confuse them," is an old political motto.
|
|
Unfortunately for her, she appeared to confuse it for China on arrival.
|
|
They've made up their minds and don't confuse me with the facts.
|
|
Too often, journalists confuse centrism with fairness, objectivity or common-sense truth.
|
|
And Mr. Trump continues to confuse that, intentionally or not, with climate.
|
|
Luxury automakers' efforts to dazzle and amaze may instead confuse and annoy.
|
|
They confuse a lot of what really needs to be talked about.
|
|
This description seems apt yet might confuse those unfamiliar with the genre.
|
|
And believe it or not, even plants confuse Uber's self-driving cars.
|
|
Here's what you need to know: Qatar seems to confuse Donald Trump.
|
|
This is his crisis, and he shouldn't be allowed to confuse that.
|
|
These little things make it easy to confuse the car for the couch.
|
|
At first glance, the fund-raising email from TrumPAC could confuse a recipient.
|
|
"People talk about recession, and they confuse it with slowing down," Moynihan said.
|
|
That is really important I don't want anyone to confuse this with Merck.
|
|
No one would confuse this frigid corner of northern Finland with Silicon Valley.
|
|
The prosecutor said the lightning made the shooter confuse one for the other.
|
|
To Obama, Schumer and others, I say: don't confuse theology with national sovereignty.
|
|
The dissonance didn't confuse his supporters, nor did it tamp down enthusiasm Saturday.
|
|
That recent one where people hide behind a towel to confuse their dogs.
|
|
How easy (or hard) is it to confuse a gun for a Taser?
|
|
Mr. Putin must not confuse a strong hand with victory — or with respect.
|
|
Let's not confuse the president's refusal to comply with a right to refusal.
|
|
More shapes are added in to confuse the hell out of you, too.
|
|
The first is not to confuse a legal process with a political one.
|
|
When snow is falling, the laser can confuse snowflakes with more solid objects.
|
|
But critics of the passive often confuse two different things: syntax and semantics.
|
|
"Never confuse determination with desperation," Gibson wrote when he re-Intagrammed Diesel's photo.
|
|
So nobody will confuse you for wearing a non-Kylie branded beauty product.
|
|
Fools confuse means for ends and will take action simply out of spite.
|
|
Do not confuse money market mutual funds with money market accounts at banks.
|
|
People often confuse my toys with games — puzzles, Rubik's Cubes and so forth.
|
|
Could an immigrant whose English isn't perfect confuse the words "minor" and "minority"?
|
|
I'll just roll into class and confuse everyone, like, 'Is the professor's mother?
|
|
Scene 1 (Well, Scene 141, to be exact, but let's not confuse things)
|
|
But nor should anyone confuse this modestly scaled exercise with a towering accomplishment.
|
|
In fact, graphics may confuse some of the scanning software that companies use.
|
|
They kept their worn-out Stetsons so you wouldn't confuse them with railroaders.
|
|
That, too, is to confuse legitimate criticism of an ideology with illegitimate bigotry.
|
|
"I think what is happening is people confuse bitcoin with blockchain," Griffin said.
|
|
In fact, it's something so obvious that only Washington bureaucrats could confuse it.
|
|
AND I THINK WHAT IS HAPPENING IS PEOPLE CONFUSE BITCOIN WITH BLOCK CHAIN.
|
|
Schulz said consumers often confuse deferred-interest periods with zero-interest introductory rates.
|
|
There's more than enough stuff to frustrate, confuse, and, yes, even outrage you.
|
|
It doesn't harm or confuse children the way you are told it does.
|
|
Critics say the system can confuse voters and make ballot counting more complicated.
|
|
"I do not confuse current leaders and the reality of Brazil," he added.
|
|
Others knocked over trash cans and moved barrier gates around to confuse attendees.
|
|
Much of it is mumbo-jumbo, phony phrases meant to confuse the defense.
|
|
What we often confuse with condescension these days is its curdled opposite: contempt.
|
|
We journalists often confuse soliciting new information with wanting to understand a subject.
|
|
I want to confuse people with my gender expression, play with their assumptions.
|
|
It's been called a "clown car primary" and is sure to confuse voters.
|
|
It wants to confuse the public and delay any final judgment by Congress.
|
|
"It's going to confuse the living shit out of our viewers," he says.
|
|
Big words confuse her, and her math skills don't go past third grade.
|
|
Many young poets, however, confuse being deliberately obscure with creating a deeper mystery.
|
|
When I did this now, I said I probably maybe will confuse people.
|
|
In general, do questions of when to tip and how much confuse you?
|
|
Well OK, you might say, that concept seems to confuse even our president.
|
|
To mistake them for cyborgs is to confuse the figurative with the literal.
|
|
Such a scenario could overwhelm or confuse the system and render it useless.
|
|
But the gray banner strikes me as being just as easy to confuse.
|
|
But if it doesn't, the rest of us can't confuse power with truth.
|
|
In essence, he's saying ... don't confuse me with my company, we're separate entities.
|
|
I pondered how to construct impromptu blockades to delay or confuse an attacker.
|
|
Good sci-fi brings up questions, and good movie aliens should confuse us.
|
|
But don't confuse the Samsung / ADT system with a full-blown, professionally installed setup.
|
|
An algorithm could easily confuse the language of a victim and a sex trafficker.
|
|
Let's not confuse my trying to Be generous and move on, with anything else.
|
|
The lighting that night made the shooter confuse one for the other, they said.
|
|
Do people also confuse emotions that are really far apart, like happiness and guilt?
|
|
It's not surprising that technologists would use their power to harm or confuse people.
|
|
But don't confuse warm air coming from your car's radiator with a warm engine.
|
|
Others, however, wonder if the sanctions don't so much rattle Russia as confuse it.
|
|
It was as if it had been arranged that way intentionally to confuse her.
|
|
But automated algorithms easily confuse a joke or slang with a potential shooter's threat.
|
|
"There is zero chance that I would confuse them," she told the Washington Post.
|
|
After spending time with this book, I may never again confuse Eurydice and Persephone.
|
|
There's room for error, of course: Poor images or strange exposures could confuse it.
|
|
If you confuse people enough, however, they're bound to be afraid no matter what.
|
|
But let's not confuse the industry's interest with the consumers' and public health interest.
|
|
Washington (CNN)No one would confuse Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton for happy warriors.
|
|
The actor claims that fans constantly confuse him for another big star, Matt Damon.
|
|
Accompanying status updates explained why they were posting, essentially to "confuse" and "overwhelm" police.
|
|
This could confuse some users into thinking they're composing a tweet, not a reply.
|
|
Do they keep long, wandering storylines that reward old fans but confuse new ones?
|
|
They confuse the whole thing until it disappears or collapses of its own weight.
|
|
Cargo cults confuse those things which accompany the desired outcome with the thing itself.
|
|
Many confuse Gabbard's opposition to the recent bombing or regime change as supporting Assad.
|
|
Much like the original, it will entertain, challenge, baffle, occasionally confuse but ultimately delight.
|
|
You shouldn't confuse tax alpha with tax efficiency, financial advisors such as Keebler noted.
|
|
"I think people confuse being blunt and forceful as the truth," Mr. Kondabolu said.
|
|
Now, this voluntary action is being used to confuse and spread misinformation, he said.
|
|
But it would be a mistake to confuse this with a lack of conviction.
|
|
The office characterized the video as a bad faith attempt to confuse poll volunteers.
|
|
Words like conundrum and the similar-sounding affect and effect continue to confuse people.
|
|
When you're making out your holiday shopping budget, don't confuse Santa with Uncle Sam.
|
|
Don't confuse good short-term results with the best strategy for long-term success.
|
|
And if you let outside advice confuse you, it could muddle the divorce process.
|
|
Dries is constantly correcting people who may confuse Batwoman with Batgirl, another Batman character.
|
|
It also argued that the long lists of investments served only to confuse investors.
|
|
ABC News analysis, Rick Klein: Midterm results may confuse as much as they clarify.
|
|
We should not confuse the much rarer murder-suicides with the more common homicides.
|
|
"I have also told him not to confuse knowledge with experience," Mr. Dunser said.
|
|
The NFL's pass interference rules continued to confuse the larger football world on Sunday.
|
|
Top players move with such incredible quickness that you might confuse them for newtypes.
|
|
People confuse and mix that term, making it equal to Nazisim, fascism, and chauvinism.
|
|
We confuse silence for peace — then go a little crazy when we have it.
|
|
Many of them predicted the bees would confuse totality for nighttime and stop flying.
|
|
Hélène's insights are modest: Don't confuse your own joys and preferences with anyone else's.
|
|
"This is an effort by Philip Morris to confuse the public," Mr. Bloomberg said.
|
|
The conservative media is a giant fog machine designed to confuse and disorient people.
|
|
What we seem to confuse, lately, are these two very different denominations of civility.
|
|
But it's difficult to conduct a dialogue with people who confuse Austria and Australia.
|
|
The workers built false doorways, extra chambers, and dead ends to confuse grave robbers.
|
|
Trying to confuse the public about that is evil on a whole different level.
|
|
They can confuse and disappoint us, which is why we must keep rereading them.
|
|
Ring removes the terms, a company representative wrote, so as not to "confuse" residents.
|
|
With the exception of Best New Artist, it's easy to confuse the other three.
|
|
Don't confuse it with "Reasonable Doubt," an Investigation Discovery series that began in April.
|
|
Williams also wants to use his speed to confuse and challenge opposing defensive backs.
|
|
But, Kelly Osbourne tried to confuse the judges by switching to a southern accent.
|
|
To confuse the two roles is to risk damage to America's separation of powers.
|
|
The lyrics to "Memory" — a contribution by the original director Trevor Nunn — now confuse.
|
|
In his closing statement, he seemed to confuse a text message for a URL.
|
|
Check. He seems to confuse Sasha with another black Hilltopper before Jesus corrects him.
|
|
"We confuse the idea of having a job with fulfilling your purpose," he added.
|
|
Such attacks on the integrity of news organizations confuse the public about what's true.
|
|
The form currently used to explain the option might confuse customers, Mr. Bourke said.
|
|
Sometimes those worlds deceive and confuse; at other times, they tell us something revelatory.
|
|
But there are new wrinkles that might confuse things a bit on Monday night.
|
|
No one is going to confuse the new album for a Beach Boys homage.
|
|
The simultaneous spectacles may confuse average Americans who pay scant attention to foreign affairs.
|
|
And it's a safe bet that this will confuse a lot of Trump supporters.
|
|
From now on, no one will confuse the Queens neighborhood with Jeff Bezos' Valentine.
|
|
If they can do nothing more than confuse an issue, they've accomplished their mission.
|
|
The trouble is that bitcoin enthusiasts confuse the characteristics of money with its nature.
|
|
You always ... People always confuse Darwinism as the strong survive, and it's actually incorrect.
|
|
John Stones appeared, at one point, to confuse the match with a pickup game.
|
|
During the proceedings on Thursday, Kavanaugh seemed to confuse blackout drinking and passing out.
|
|
More broadly, the industry-funded papers can confuse the public – and even government experts.
|
|
"Do not confuse our children," said a banner held by a woman in her fifties.
|
|
Airlines are worried further splits between regulators over safety could confuse passengers and cause disruption.
|
|
But don't confuse her with a night nanny, who is taking instructions from the parents.
|
|
She was taught those things were bad for her health and would confuse her mind.
|
|
In fact, medical professionals sometimes confuse a yellow sac spider bite for a brown recluse's.
|
|
He is trying to confuse the public so that they will not believe inconvenient truths.
|
|
It will likely confuse all other humans who dare to take part in the future.
|
|
Just make sure people don't confuse you with an IRL hooligan — we've heard they're trouble.
|
|
Why it matters: Don't confuse the ACA with the health insurance market most people use.
|
|
But some experts are worried that the heavy promotion of such figures can confuse investors.
|
|
The pair manage to confuse and intimidate passerby with their raucous romp through the streets.
|
|
"Social media can confuse our process of grief," Los Angeles-based mortician Caitlin Doughty says.
|
|
Mayer revealed the misleading questioning tactics Ada police used to confuse Ward during his testimony.
|
|
Don't confuse Snapchat as being framed as a place people go to share frivolous videos.
|
|
Don't confuse this with the other two Electronic Arts Star Wars games we know about.
|
|
The result was an AI that was difficult to beat but also easy to confuse.
|
|
Oftentimes, translucencies confuse the camera and tricks it into thinking it's part of the background.
|
|
Our phones, computers, cameras, and smart homes can both confuse us and make us careless.
|
|
Airlines are worried further differences between regulators over safety could confuse passengers and cause disruption.
|
|
Coyle said the sun could blind or confuse the infrared detectors on the kill vehicle.
|
|
Diplo Diplo seized the opportunity to further confuse his and James Van Der Beek's identities.
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They're easy to confuse, being only distinguished by an extra letter 's' and by price.
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They also find pleasure in saying things that are meant to confuse or hurt others.
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Our medical illiteracy allows educated, well-intended people to confuse signs of withdrawal with addiction.
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In the past, DuPont said "mega trials" would confuse jurors and be unfair to it.
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Just don't confuse minced garlic with the crushed garlic that also comes in a jar.
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The Fixes: Bordeaux's bicycle facilities do not follow a uniform consistency, which can confuse users.
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Then, just to confuse everyone, Trisha continued to respond to other comments asking about Perrie.
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We need him to align with the progressive future, and not confuse contrarianism with intellectualism.
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An elaborate policy programme from More United, a political group, will only confuse the issue.
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Hard because the outside voices of (mostly) well meaning advisors can overwhelm and confuse me.
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I always like to say, do not confuse a great company with a great stock.
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Although there is some truth to this, it does confuse an explanation with a justification.
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If you didn't know any better, you might confuse him for their former leader, Shiro.
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But don't confuse these exceptions, even if they are glaring ones, with the general rule.
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This undue burden can confuse voters and leave them reliant upon someone else to help.
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To Surabian, though, such establishment voices confuse their own priorities with those of Republican voters.
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The goal is only to deflect, confuse, and mislead, in defense of the status quo.
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The area seems to confuse whales, as it's been the site of previous mass strandings.
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"Many wine-tasting terms confuse me or make me skeptical, but not minerality," Ferguson wrote.
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They've steadily appeared on the internet through the ages and they're ready to confuse you.
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Does that kind of language clarify or confuse the vital issues that are at stake?
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It's easy to confuse nunchi with empathy, but having too much empathy can be destabilizing.
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However, I believe there are factual errors in the piece that ultimately confuse the issue.
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ICAHN: DON'T CONFUSE THE SEC, AS FAR AS I'M CONCERNED, WITH THE ETFs GOING DOWN.
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He added that any "open talk" of tapering or ending its stimulus would confuse markets.
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It may also confuse others who've either worked with or funded Rahman in the past.
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When we repeatedly confuse those two words, one of them ceases to have any value.
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Don't confuse consumers, listeners, readers about what is the ad and what is the content.
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Let me throw some legalese in here and confuse you, and then I'll do it.
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Both are self-made Jewish entrepreneurs from South Florida, and voters appeared to confuse them.
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They make me happy, they feel good to look at, they sort of confuse me.
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Don't let the expulsion of these officials confuse the real issue — the larger Mueller investigation.
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The net effect, according to analysts, has been to confuse both North and South Korea.
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Cops can confuse people taking out wallets from their pockets for guns, with tragic consequences.
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Most nonprofits, as Bill Gates says in the book, confuse their mission with their objectives.
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She asserts he is on the ballot just to confuse voters in the polling booths.
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To confuse nationalism with patriotism is to mistake contempt for love and fear for valor.
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Kuznets cautioned that people should not confuse the economy's total output with economic well-being.
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A picture caption with an article on Tuesday about people who confuse Kansas City, Kan.
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"His opinions are ignorant and harmful," she added, "because they confuse people rather than educate."
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Coeure said this risked creating a "cacophony" of diverging views that could confuse market participants.
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If you start a series in the middle, there may be references that confuse you.
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You're not going to confuse the Tundra for anything other than a full-size pickup.
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The brand's revival and electric revamp might confuse consumers accustomed with the Hummer of old.
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Poking holes The gaps made it quite easy for Republicans to confuse what he said.
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"Late term" is an invention of anti-abortion extremists to confuse, mislead and increase stigma.
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I don't want to confuse the two issues," Sanders told CNN's "State of the Union.
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That means we should not confuse the airlines' plans for privatization with real ATC modernization.
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But don't confuse these nuances and the scientific uncertainty with doubt about the overall picture.
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And they might also say, "How's it going at Forbes?" because they confuse the two.
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When your edits confuse your audience instead of moving the story along, that's a problem.
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"We shouldn't confuse a facility with repeating back talking points with foreign policy expertise," Nexon says.
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As you plug away at your New Year's resolutions, don't confuse the goal with the reward.
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Nobody has figured out how to tackle snow, which tends to confuse today's computer vision systems.
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She worked really hard to confuse women who were accustomed to going to our old location.
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Nobody would confuse Hong Kong's lite-brite nighttime cityscape with a crystalline autumn morning in Boston.
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Someone asked me recently why I was doing this, and why I wanted to confuse people.
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Don't confuse this with two other existing Microsoft offerings that give you access to Xbox games.
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Republicans bought into internet providers' arguments that the rules discriminated against them and could confuse consumers.
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Some anti-skimming devices are "frequency-jammers," which scramble the card data and confuse skimming devices.
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One has been to thoroughly confuse people who arrive with a Groupon on the wrong week.
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But the noise seemed to confuse the Wisconsin representative, and he struggled to determine its source.
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I was just like, 'Oh my god, please tell me that people confuse you with me.
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I work in a male-dominated field, and my pregnancy seemed to confuse my male bosses.
|
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Don't let the flurry of news confuse you: This a clear, straightforward, and politically devastating scandal.
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An actor named Fionn Whitehead — who you should definitely not confuse with those other television FWs.
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For Pepón Osorio, it's not just the RNC that has the ability to confuse and manipulate.
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Two more cars of activists pull up, after driving circuitously through neighbouring suburbs to confuse police.
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And the look is so familiar, you might confuse her for the show's producer, Selena Gomez.
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Don't confuse the odds in the political prediction market with the information in public opinion polls.
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Mr Kurz's critics have been too quick to confuse a focus on border management with xenophobia.
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Tesla continues to confuse consumers by giving its assisted-driving features names that overstate its capabilities.
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To confuse matters further, the degree to which elements accumulate in leaves varies with the seasons.
|
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But trolling can also encompass any kind of willfully obtuse nonsense that's designed to confuse people.
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"On the timing:"When I did this now I said, 'I probably maybe will confuse people.
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Luckily, there's still plenty of contemporary art to confuse even the most open-minded among us.
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Luckily, there's still plenty of contemporary art to confuse even the most open-minded among us.
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However, to confuse that with being "for" people is one hell of a mistake to make.
|
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Yet somehow, many in the GOP confuse macho talk with leadership, imagining that bluster is enough.
|
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Step aside, "American Gods" and "Legion," and see how TV that dares to confuse is done.
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What if Gmail's importance markers miss your actually important stuff and only serve to confuse you?
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The advert will confuse consumers and hurt the value of Pelé's endorsement rights, the complaint added.
|
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CEO Tewolde Gebremariam said it was important not to confuse safety-critical equipment with optional items.
|
|
When some countries send mixed messages, others know this is a coordinated game designed to confuse.
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In honor of World Literacy Month, Burger King created a campaign that might confuse some folks.
|
|
But let's not confuse a one-off saving of jobs with a thought-out economic plan.
|
|
"He is going there to work, don't confuse someone seeking their livelihood with fleeing," said LeBaron.
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Being a teammate of Goes, Belfort began to fall back on the guard to confuse Sakuraba.
|
|
The casting choices don't confuse what is already complex, but neither do they add much meaning.
|
|
Some say it is to confuse prey; others believe it is to protect scorpions from sunlight.
|
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Other designs confuse AI with images of decoy faces, preventing it from making the right identification.
|
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Timothée Chalamet said fans on the street often confuse him for Spider-Man actor Tom Holland.
|
|
Some Russian-based operatives were out to divide our country and sought to confuse our voters.
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Images of supernatural heroism don't confuse us about what the human body can accomplish or endure.
|
|
But he's been beseeching the country not to confuse low-rent entertainment with high-end politics.
|
|
Those who find current events disturbing and worth protesting shouldn't confuse these tips as encouraging complacency.
|
|
Water Protectors are calling on EVERYONE to check in at SR to overwhelm and confuse them.
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In other words, he's willing to confuse and cause chaos when that is what is warranted.
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A lot of people confuse bullshit jobs and shit jobs, but they're not the same thing.
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Anything that merges with the edges of your subject a bunch of times could confuse it.
|
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And whatever he does next will confuse/impress/amuse us in ways we probably never expected.
|
|
The hackers, whom Kaspersky Lab dubbed "TigerMilk," were trying to confuse investigators and security researchers alike.
|
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Ancient Celts dressed up as evil spirits in order to confuse demons, according to Smithsonian Magazine.
|
|
This can confuse investors and lead to wild gyrations of long- and short-term interest rates.
|
|
When people are looking at that shit for too long, they confuse politics and reality shows.
|
|
Little Trees believes unsuspecting customers will confuse the 2 brands ... and that crosses the legal line.
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No golfer in their right mind would confuse the club champion with the senior division winner.
|
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I guess when you're new to politics, it's easy to confuse opposition research and attempted collusion.
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If you say something like, "Grandpa passed away" instead of "died," it may confuse your child.
|
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People confuse intelligence with consciousness; they expect A.I. to have consciousness, which is a total mistake.
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To deal with that, modern skyscrapers use a slew of architectural tricks to confuse the wind.
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"It would confuse the public at a time when we need consistent health messaging," Gostin says.
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It's up to the delegates at the convention, so the recommendations, I think, just confuse people.
|
|
Netflix has a new show that's sure to confuse anyone searching for the third Thor movie.
|
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He does not confuse feelings with emotions, which are public and can be inspected by others.
|
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It's easy to confuse being audience to a venting session with being asked to weigh in.
|
|
"A massive problem is we tend to overeat and confuse hunger with being dehydrated," Castano added.
|
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Too often, it is a party of people who seem to confuse governing with cutting taxes.
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After a refrain of "Together…" we learn how ants harvest their food and zebras confuse predators.
|
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Ms. Donlan also warned of what she called a legal gray area that will confuse people.
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This will frighten, confuse and discourage the most vulnerable in our population from receiving health care.
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It would be so easy to confuse the two if there was a test or something!
|
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I think sometimes people confuse being too critical or demotivating with really helping somebody be great.
|
|
The researchers then compared results and found that it is not easy to confuse a muscle.
|
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They have publicly stated that Russia aims to influence, demoralize and confuse us through disinformation operations.
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Information, knowledge, wisdom, and learningMost people confuse knowledge with learning, but they are not the same.
|
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Republicans will try to confuse with process and the Democrats will try to persuade with evidence.
|
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The attorney general appeared to confuse news reports with classified information he received from intelligence reports.
|
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But let's not confuse symptoms with the cause of fundamental imbalances aggravated by unhelpful decision-making.
|
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"The timing and substance of this new position serves to confuse rather than clarify," he said.
|
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The vivid pink color might have evolved to confuse the owls who prey on the squirrels.
|
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"I try not to confuse my own personal success with the industry as a whole," Brown clarified.
|
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In the meantime, don't confuse your living benefit value, which isn't actual cash, and your account value.
|
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It's important to not confuse the tool that makes you better at something with that thing itself.
|
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But Bacon and the lifestyle gurus that have come before her also confuse the public on health.
|
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Todd Sohn, technical analyst at Strategas Research, said he would not confuse Tuesday's weakness with a low.
|
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And that is why they are blaming BNP... to confuse the people and cover up their ineffectiveness.
|
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One thing that might confuse consumers is that some models have two versions of collision-avoidance systems.
|
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But don't confuse this company with a startup, it's well-established globally with offices in 17 countries.
|
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International travelers have the added challenge of crossing many time zones, which can confuse the body clock.
|
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The effect is similar: false or meaningless follower counts can confuse the basic fabric of the platform.
|
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The experts warn that some people may confuse normal side effects with an allergy and avoid vaccination.
|
|
But then with Carl's idol nullifier in play, the Davids didn't actually need to misdirect or confuse.
|
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These YouTube videos are far from the first pieces of children's media to unnerve or confuse adults.
|
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The problem is a lot of internet marketers confuse grey and black hat tactics with growth hacking.
|
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And he couldn't wait to confuse his teacher when they walked into class with the same haircut.
|
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But even when people are trying to be funny, they confuse what Xanax is actually used for.
|
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The downside risk, however, is that changes can also confuse staff and partners about strategy and direction.
|
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He said, politely, that I should not confuse elation of with a sense of a job completed.
|
|
But while this reaction is common, that doesn't mean it doesn't confuse the hell out of people.
|
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Despite the fact that many of these clips are meant to confuse us, this trailer feels different.
|
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Jacobs had gone southpaw to try to confuse Pirog and it hadn't worked to slow him down.
|
|
But when looking for planets within disks, the algorithms can confuse clumps and clouds for newborn worlds.
|
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When you confuse your brain by exposing it in the evening to what it thinks is a.m.
|
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"When I did this now I said, I probably, maybe will confuse people," Trump told NBC News.
|
|
Suiche told Motherboard that he thinks the hackers are just "trolling," trying to confuse researchers and journalists.
|
|
So sneaky you can throw it in your purse, just don't confuse it with your actual makeup.
|
|
However, Pescatore warned that the a la carte system offered by Amazon may confuse and frustrate customers.
|
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He warned that tumbleweed, police officers giving traffic directions and wild animals could all confuse driverless cars.
|
|
Remember, a game is a game, and real life is real life; let's not confuse the two.
|
|
Luckily, plenty of research has also been done about how to confuse or evade facial recognition tech.
|
|
"I think they confuse his persona with the kind of person he actually is," Mr. Johnson said.
|
|
Some Twitter users did confuse the two, apparently, leading to some "bitter comments" left on Hansen's feed.
|
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In launching Zelle, banks are being careful not to confuse customers by offering yet another payments app.
|
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No one will confuse the current Rams with any of the hallowed tenants that came before them.
|
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While many Americans may confuse Dia de los Muertos with Halloween, these are two very different holidays.
|
|
I've worked in the public, private and nonprofit sectors, and people tend to confuse activity and results.
|
|
Another reason we confuse being better with being richer is that we fall prey to survivorship bias.
|
|
"Consumers confuse the income guarantee with a guaranteed return and they overpay because of it," said Ruiz.
|
|
Rather, it was a tweet that contained a word that would confuse media outlets and Trump watchers.
|
|
Lots of people confuse the two -- or have no clue where one ends and the other begins.
|
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Given its name and proximity to EMW, patients might confuse A Woman's Choice for the abortion clinic.
|
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Yes, the summer schvitz is real, but don't confuse that sweat and oil with proper skin hydration.
|
|
We often confuse being productive with working as fast as we can, every second of the day.
|
|
One of the pitfalls in trying to establish equality is to confuse gaining power with unleashing rage.
|
|
Distrusting expertise makes it easy to confuse an absence of randomized evaluations with an absence of knowledge.
|
|
Echo Glow, $29.99, preorder nowDon't let the name confuse you: The Echo Glow isn't an Echo Speaker.
|
|
They're political church art, designed to overpower, to look superhuman, to confuse you into believing their vision.
|
|
This is a diversionary tactic designed to confuse the media and lawmakers about how pharmacy coverage works.
|
|
Waze also tends to confuse Palestinian and Israeli areas, which often have the same, or similar, names.
|
|
Lets confuse you more: what do you make of the whole pop stars running through fields trend?
|
|
It's easy to confuse the two, since both states are largely characterized by a dip in mood.
|
|
Within MMA, I was already watching Rousey's runaway crossover appeal confuse and frustrate the die-hard fans.
|
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That the Syrian regime called their rescue a "criminal operation" should surprise few and confuse even fewer.
|
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They also say that having separate rules governing internet service providers and web services could confuse users.
|
|
Thomas Jefferson's followers called themselves Republicans, but their enemies called them Democrats — just to confuse us today.
|
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Opaque party politics will confuse outside investors and blur the line between some state and private companies.
|
|
Which means the show has been using their ageless robot characters to confuse us about the timelines.
|
|
It doesn't matter if you confuse Sun Tzu with Coco Chanel, or Coco Chanel with Abraham Lincoln.
|
|
I want to hold on this point for a second, because I think it will confuse people.
|
|
Creating doubt around the science could confuse pregnant women and encourage them to ignore warnings, they feared.
|
|
Still, don't confuse a setback with a trend, Andrés Martinez has advised in The Los Angeles Times.
|
|
In our polarized era, Democrats do sometimes confuse its progressive base with the country as a whole.
|
|
They say the price disclosures would confuse consumers, who often pay less than the full list price.
|
|
That can confuse lawmakers and law enforcement officials, in part because hemp looks (and smells) like marijuana.
|
|
He was only doing that to gain their trust, to confuse them and get what he wanted.
|
|
"A lot of companies confuse creating opportunities for community with creating opportunities to strengthen networks," Krivkovich says.
|
|
"We confuse people because a lot of people can't imagine people who aren't considering sides," he said.
|
|
No one should confuse the soft-spoken painter with the wild characters in his films and paintings.
|
|
At one point, Maibaum suggested a scene in which 007 has cosmetic surgery to confuse his enemies.
|
|
But scientists have long dismissed such claims, which confuse isolated weather patterns with long-term climate trends.
|
|
He often remarks on how handsome he is, using his looks to overwhelm and confuse his enemies.
|
|
Contradictory accounts were "allegations to confuse the result of the investigation" and discredit his men, he said.
|
|
If you're not sure, can you explain that ambiguity, or are you just likely to confuse them?
|
|
Pumpkin spice protein powder Pumpkin spice in your protein powder is just going to confuse your body.
|
|
I think that it is obvious that I.C.E. officials are attempting to confuse people that they stop.
|
|
We "should not confuse climate with local variability," said Rignot, who was not involved in the research.
|
|
Their distorted volumes and perspectives challenge comprehension and confuse inside with out and two with three dimensions.
|
|
To confuse matters, most Sicilians call cauliflower broccoli, even though the Italian word for it is cavolfiore.
|
|
He talked a lot during those years, and everything he said seemed only to confuse the picture.
|
|
It looks to me like sophistry – word games intended to confuse what should be a simple issue.
|
|
The power of such movements seems stronger to us when we confuse our liberal fantasies with reality.
|
|
Lu said the U.S. government was provoking suspicion in the U.S. public to confuse and instigate opposition.
|
|
And this riddle about the days of the week can confuse even the most organized calendar keepers.
|
|
Don't confuse Bruce with Eric, the Paddock brother living in Florida, who's been speaking to the media.
|
|
KS: Hm, and they just, you said why did you just, confuse yourself, or you just were?
|
|
It would confuse Riverdale fans who haven't heard a mention of a Jughead doppelganger on the mystery series.
|
|
Danny Trevathan, an inside linebacker, often began the play outside, which seemed to confuse the Cats' offensive line.
|
|
In his tweet, Trump appeared to confuse U.S. crude and Brent crude, the international benchmark for oil prices.
|
|
One bat sends out a signal to confuse another bat as both of them approach an insect target.
|
|
I love this style, but the eyes-down intensity and complex rhythms can confuse an uninitiated dance floor.
|
|
The Spark bounces around in a breeze, and that seems to confuse the infrared sensor to no end.
|
|
Some sources suggest that ISIS is even forcing civilians to drive around the city to confuse the enemy.
|
|
Fashion has the tendency to confuse and rebrand old products as new trends, but we already knew that.
|
|
It's a great experience if you don't mind the fact that some may confuse it for an iPhone.
|
|
That imagery can confuse people about the true nature of the death penalty, which is to punish people.
|
|
I even fell asleep faster, since the light from my phone was not there to confuse my body.
|
|
Don't let them confuse you: Just because Bernie is still running doesn't mean he's still in the running.
|
|
And it's too easy to confuse a propensity to bullshit through life with a lost grip on reality.
|
|
"But then you hang out with Jennifer, and they confuse me with the security guard all the time!"
|
|
You are not necessarily ingenuous, or even a dolt in classics, if you confuse that word with ingenious.
|
|
Cecile Janssens, an epidemiologist at Emory University, said she worries that tests like Orig3n's will confuse the public.
|
|
The biggest argument against changing the inflation target is that it will confuse the heck out of people.
|
|
Mary Jane takes Justin to a Michelin star rated restaurant that she rented out to confuse the paparazzi.
|
|
Anonymous, Massachusetts Many people confuse "not looking gift horses in the mouth" with a prohibition on saying anything.
|
|
AHS attempts to confuse us with Timothy and Emily throughout the season with all of Outposts Three's antics.
|
|
Your one-liner, read quickly, could confuse or alienate the very people you need to support your application.
|
|
We just don't want to confuse people or scare people into thinking that mass killings are more frequent.
|
|
These seven lesser known museums around the U.S. will entertain, educate and, in one case, possibly confuse you.
|
|
When this happens, have a conversation to get clarity — but don't confuse that conversation with a schoolroom lesson.
|
|
They use jokes, quotations, emotional outbursts, misdirection, and all manner of verbal dodges to confuse and distract questioners.
|
|
But structural forces now confront him that are likely to confound and confuse his very thin senior staff.
|
|
"There's a risk the messages coming out from the BOJ could confuse markets and create volatility," he said.
|
|
The message urges users to check-in to the location in an effort to "overwhelm and confuse" officers.
|
|
You can use 'em to strike up a conversation, confuse your parents, or play coy on dating apps.
|
|
The other thing that tends to confuse people is the eye-popping growth rates of these competing firms.
|
|
This was only one show, but nobody will confuse the effort with the documentaries of Edward R. Murrow.
|
|
Sanne Weekers, a design student in the Netherlands, created a headscarf decorated with faces intended to confuse algorithms.
|
|
Stutts suggests throwing firecrackers off into the distance to confuse others who might try to track you down.
|
|
The new Chevy Blazer is a stylish crossover that might confuse some fans of the nameplate's rugged lineage.
|
|
His journal described a method of attack in which a gunman can keep moving to confuse the enemy.
|
|
Sketch Guy I fear the clever marketing in the traditional financial services industry continues to confuse many people.
|
|
"People sometimes confuse us with a men's-rights organization," Andrew Burmon, Fatherly's editor-in-chief, said, sipping coffee.
|
|
"Most people confuse where it was fun to vacation with where it is good to retire," he said.
|
|
But in reality, both mainly serve to confuse working-class people—and squeeze them out of health coverage.
|
|
He aptly wrote, "That's my toe," lest anyone were to confuse it with any of his other appendages.
|
|
It would confuse CNN's viewers at a time when one had to be either for or against Trump.
|
|
If you watch the show, we're constantly mixing up what's red and what's blue, just to confuse you.
|
|
Even in Ann Arbor, where they weren't what anyone would confuse with authentic, the school tacos were sublime.
|
|
Webster believes that "our medical illiteracy allows educated, well-intended people to confuse signs of withdrawal with addiction."
|
|
"Symptoms are easy to confuse with other conditions such as arthritis, so it often goes undiagnosed," he warned.
|
|
Indeed, Sanders regularly seems to confuse American intervention with standing up for our ideals and those in danger.
|
|
There is a lot of that here, and also, to confuse matters further, a lot of good acting.
|
|
Kendall's subsequent embrace of Shiv and assurances that he's no danger to her don't confuse things any less.
|
|
Almost invariably, Buñuel's films, when they depict the bourgeoisie, depict forces at work to confuse or punish it.
|
|
For example, touch screens, automatic braking, and self-parking features can confuse people who've never encountered them before.
|
|
Smoking kills people, and tobacco companies that tried to confuse the public about that reality were being evil.
|
|
We believe this document has the potential to confuse two different events surrounding our knowledge of Cambridge Analytica.
|
|
Misleading marketing and labeling may confuse parents about the health value of many juices, a new report finds.
|
|
Maybe it's that people confuse her with the characters she plays, who tend to project a shy sweetness.
|
|
Pelosi appeared to confuse the quote of Oliver Wendell Holmes in the Supreme Court decision in Schenck v.
|
|
Russia's cyber activity seeks to confuse, destabilize and ultimately bring to power foreign governments pliant to Russia's aims.
|
|
Johnson said this would likely confuse the public, tarnishing his rights to a phrase "inextricably linked" with him.
|
|
But let's not confuse tariffs as a political tactic with tariffs as economic policy for its own sake.
|
|
In particular, doctors confuse it with an incurable form of dementia known as progressive supranuclear palsy, or PSP.
|
|
Electronic warfare is the use of radio, infrared or radar signals to confuse or disable an adversary's electronics.
|
|
There would be less occasion to confuse serving special interests in the capital with serving constituents at home.
|
|
They are all set up like this crazy cattle chute system to confuse you and take your money.
|
|
Complicated automation systems can also confuse pilots and potentially cause them to take action they shouldn't, pilots said.
|
|
Turtles suffocate when they confuse shopping bags with jellyfish, or drown when they get entangled in discarded nets.
|
|
And other researchers have developed patterned glasses that are specially designed to trick and confuse AI facial recognition systems.
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SO Water Protectors are calling on EVERYONE to check-in at Standing Rock, ND to overwhelm and confuse them.
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One unexpected benefit, he reports, is that addressing the misinformation alongside the facts doesn't confuse, but instead adds interest.
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It is very common for investors to confuse the two terms and potentially end up with poor investment choices.
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"He is trying purely and simply to confuse the French," said Marisol Touraine, health minister in the Socialist government.
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The council was concerned, she said, that the FDA's study might confuse consumers and discourage the use of sunscreen.
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The Trump Organization's companies are pass-throughs, for instance, and no one would confuse it with a small business.
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I had enough adrenaline in my system to confuse my pain tolerance and went into a state of shock.
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"Our results further establish that men confuse contextual factors indicative of sexual desire with implied consent," reads the study.
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Then, Nvidia went and painted it gold, so you wouldn't confuse it with any of those other pedestrian GPUs.
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Congressmen criticized him on television; friends and dignitaries warned him privately not to confuse humanitarian issues with national security.
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It continued to change defenses, sometimes throwing in a press, in an effort to confuse and slow Wichita State.
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Love and romance usually confuse the hell out of all people who have ever tried their hand at them.
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Troll campaigns from Russia, Iran, and Saudi Arabia have raged through Twitter, trying to silence opposition and confuse opponents.
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"We weaken our greatness when we confuse our patriotism with tribal rivalries," wrote Mr McCain in a farewell letter.
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Sometimes, people confuse period blood or bowel movements with hematuria, so make sure it's actually coming from your urine.
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We promise there are no complex techniques to confuse you here, just foolproof makeup that looks like anything but.
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And when people do experience symptoms, they often confuse them with vaginal infections, which is what makes it tricky.
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There will always be adversaries who seek to exacerbate our divisions and try to confuse, divide, and conquer us.
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It's a politics built on a distinctive form of propaganda, the goal of which is to confuse, not convince.
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Sometimes, however, we seem to confuse the abandonment of a particular hierarchy of sovereignty with an abandonment of democracy.
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Others posit that Mr Giuliani is trying to overwhelm and confuse, so voters do not know whom to believe.
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SO Water Protecters are calling on EVERYONE to check-in at Standing Rock, ND, to overwhelm and confuse them.
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It will change and confuse all layers of society and on all levels: economic, security, social, food, leisure etc
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A bad one, however, will serve to confuse you until you no longer know in which direction you're headed.
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Many of these colors look similar and are bound to confuse people, especially those who may be partially colorblind.
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Weenie lawyers and empty-suit business-side guys who confuse cowardice for prudence while the newsroom stands on principle!
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The trick is to not pick a giant piece of ice because it will fall out and confuse people.
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He used the phrase to explain why incumbents often confuse new, disruptive threats to their businesses with trivial gimmicks.
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As the authors note, fake-news publishers often change their domain names to evade detection and further confuse people.
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"They can create a virtual reality that is meant to confuse and achieve certain aims," said one Western diplomat.
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And I kept the sex position names to the point because I'm trying to help you, not confuse you.
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But it has a completely different shape from the Kong that's bound to confuse and delight your active pooch.
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The different purposes the youth could serve can confuse just how important each piece may be in 224-33.
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One thing is clear: American Horror Story is trying to confuse everyone with these new teasers for season 6.
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There are, as you said, bad-faith actors who have an agenda to distract and divide and to confuse.
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Moreover, as U.S. currency is a world currency, it is important not to confuse the public with design changes.
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However, I have found that my patients often confuse these symptoms with other urges like hunger or general fatigue.
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Scientists think that when they venture inland to feed, the shallow coastal waters confuse their echolocation and navigational senses.
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We just hope Beyoncé never catches wind of this bizarre suggestion that someone might confuse her kids with bread.
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Players can leave hints behind for others, or confuse them with red herrings that lead them down dead ends.
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Each twin set shared how they often confuse friends and family — I still have trouble telling one set apart.
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As the turmoil escalated in Charlottesville, the Virginia National Guard worried that the public would confuse Guardsmen and militiamen.
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"You tend to confuse responsibility and love," says Lucca, pretending like she's known Alicia for longer than a year.
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Not to confuse artworks with personal psychology, but that's a lot what Marcia Hafif was like as a person.
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So Water Protecters are calling on everyone to check-in at Randing Stock, ND to overwhelm and confuse them.
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Don't confuse the documentary with FX's glossy and provocative fictional retelling of the O.J. Simpson trial, American Crime Story.
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Trademark, meanwhile, is designed to protect a brand, so that consumers don't confuse one similar-looking product with another.
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So often, though, weather maps serve only to confuse and obfuscate, with weird lines, befuddling isobars, and garish colors.
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Their various theological arguments confuse and confound most mainstream media reporters and center-left and pure left-wing punditry.
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USC's scoring woes could be traced to Stanford's defense, particularly the way it pressured and seemed to confuse Daniels.
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His extemporaneous, rambling, quasi-factual speeches confuse pundits — including me — who are used to hearing politicians make careful arguments.
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The plaintiff, whose founder Marvin Shanken bought Wine Spectator in 1979, said Weed Spectator is likely to confuse consumers.
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Facebook says these domains are intentionally designed to mislead and confuse end users, who believe they're interacting with Facebook.
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The decision seems likely to confuse people into believing they're getting a more capable processor than they actually are.
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But while "all natural" seems to confuse consumers even further, the F.D.A. is unlikely to forbid its use altogether.
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Robles, through an interpreter, said he shook off Plawecki's initial signal to get inside Thompson's head and confuse him.
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Opponents of campus carry say that students or faculty returning fire will harm innocent persons or confuse arriving police.
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Chalamet told Radio 1 it's awesome fans confuse him for the young British actor who scored the lead role.
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Aside from their complaints about the process, food companies like General Mills argue the FDA's rule will confuse consumers.
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Unfortunately, somewhere along the way, people began to confuse the idea of achieving the American Dream with attending college.
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Matt Ryan, meanwhile, used to confuse pundits by being nearly unbeatable at home and simply O.K. on the road.
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"We shouldn't confuse where the economy is cyclically with longer-term structural changes to the labor market," said Wartzman.
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The president seemed to confuse Agent Orange with napalm, an incendiary gel that was also deployed in that conflict.
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Putting aside Whitehouse's own bias in identifying a pattern of bias, he, like many others, confuse principle with politics.
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It's a common occurrence, despite the fact that it can confuse people who are casually interested in advanced physics.
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This doesn't confuse anything: being continually reminded of the artifice of performance helps us forgive the play's occasional staginess.
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But to insist that the only road to authenticity runs through the autobiographical is to confuse means with ends.
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These measures could confuse the population, and destroy their trust in their public institutions including leadership and the media.
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She recommended sticking to just two dates per week, otherwise you may confuse feelings about some dates with others.
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In the film version of "Westworld," Crichton invites us to confuse androids for humans, but only to a point.
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"There is zero chance that I would confuse them," Ford said in a statement reported by The Washington Post.
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Also, the symptoms of bacterial vaginosis are easy to confuse with other issues, such as yeast infections and UTI.
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"Don't confuse your google search with my medical degree" was a meme that went viral a few months back.
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Standard Chartered echoed that sentiment, saying anything beyond a plain vanilla rollover is likely to confuse the oil market.
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That's not necessarily a bad thing, so long as everyone remembers not to confuse Cameron Diaz with e.e. cummings.
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Facebook has faced harsh scrutiny for its policies on misleading political ads and on ads meant to confuse voters.
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He prefers to hold meetings in the men's room, and speaks in big-picture riddles that confuse his underlings.
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This book teaches you to establish reliable income streams and that you should never confuse financial needs with wants.
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We hope that the United States does not confuse right and wrong on this issue or practice double standards.
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When their hosts confuse Nelson for his brother, who immigrated to California, Manuel and Nelson decide to play along.
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To further confuse things, though, Safavieh also provides items to Wayfair that end up in a house brand category.
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Boycott left Ireland, but his name remained, reportedly popularized by a priest who thought "ostracize" would confuse common people.
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So much information goes into the model — including 35 different measures — that it would only confuse clinicians, said Gong.
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"It'll move you and confuse you and sometimes leave you with more questions than answers," the 44th president wrote.
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For example, there are no mirrors or dark-colored floors in the bathroom, which could scare or confuse residents.
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It appeared to confuse the Taiwanese pilot, although the plane continued to ascend while turning and averted an accident.
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Snow and rain can obscure and confuse sensors, hide markings on the road, and make a car perform differently.
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I found this argument troublesome in that it seems to confuse assertiveness with aggressiveness, critical distinctions too often misinterpreted.
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No one would confuse the latest events with the high drama of the eurozone crisis from 2010 to 2012.
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Rather than improving election security, they said, removing some registrations before November would mostly confuse and disenfranchise eligible voters.
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But the new rule also has the potential to confuse investors about the value of these equity stakes, too.
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Lucille E,: Both baking powder and baking soda are leavening agents, but it's not uncommon to confuse the two.
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Still, prior decisions to license "South Park" and "Yellowstone" to NBCUniversal's streaming service Peacock confuse the strategy, said Greenfield.
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Don't confuse the eScooter with Ninebot's smaller electric scooter lineup that became ubiquitous in the e-scooter rental industry.
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That could confuse Democrats, test Republican unity and ultimately add to the chaos Putin loves to see in America.
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The pullout is likely to further confuse U.S. allies about America's reliability, while potentially emboldening would-be war criminals.
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He wields his Chekist fog machine to bewilder, confuse and paralyze his enemies because it is all he has.
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Bookshelf "No one would ever confuse me with a saint," Rick Ledbetter admits after deifying his younger brother, Tommy.
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"Still, we shouldn't confuse progress with parity," McKinsey's Kevin Sneader and Lareina Yee told Wall Street Journal last month.
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Mr. Trump's hawks—Ambassador Robert Lighthizer and Trade Director Peter Navarro—confuse trade with the world with trade with China.
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In New York, a disjointed payment system, largely due to bureaucratic limitations, has arisen as if to endlessly confuse tourists.
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There is a real risk consumers may confuse these short-term policies with health insurance that complies with ACA regulations.
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They then use the power of the Friends time jump to get their snack — and confuse co-host Colin Jost.
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Adding extra design frills would really just serve to further confuse customers about the differences between Apple's suite of laptops.
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We kill and we die for our symbols, and we often confuse the symbols themselves for the things they symbolize.
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Like many of the protesters surrounding Durbin, it seems like they&aposre all confuse I.C.E with customs and border protection.
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West EndSometimes transplants will confuse West End with Westside, the burgeoning Midtown neighborhood that houses the first Octane Coffee location.
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When Jimmy Garoppolo hands the ball off, there's almost always some kind of motion to confuse the defense (prime example).
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While those myths seem pretty ridiculous, there are others that sound so possible they're easy to confuse for the truth.
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But let's not confuse the superficial lure of these scandals with the reason why they exist in the first place.
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"I would like to do that eventually, actually, but I don't want to confuse the success of the company's business."
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The "counter" component directs people to distract or confuse a shooter through noise or movement rather than directly fight them.
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The zeal around the opening, and the lengths fans go to proclaim their Wegmans-philia, may confuse some New Yorkers.
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" When put together, the word literally means something like "mix," but is now figuratively used to be "jumble or confuse.
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I think that it's really important not to confuse these two things, because there's no affirmative action vote with Louise.
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These floral print power players will ensure you never confuse your cord and plugs for someone else's basic white set.
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These edit wars aren't catastrophic, but given the constant stream of changes, it could confuse people who read the site.
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I've tried to confuse Alexa with illogical statements in order to prompt it to self-destruct, but to no avail.
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The bite would confuse the steer, allowing Pickett to pull it over with just his jaw, his hands held skyward.
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Don't confuse deferred-interest financing with the introductory zero-percent interest deal you might get on a traditional credit card.
|
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But don't let the title confuse you — those baby cries we heard in the midseason finale were the real deal.
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But other SJW products have been found to have food coloring and other unwanted additives designed to confuse laboratory tests.
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Again, to not confuse everyone now, this gets convoluted, but I'm not saying that body count is the only metric.
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Someone is getting married in the revival, unless the production team went to great lengths to confuse spoiler hungry fans.
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If the bombastic color configuration doesn't seem much like camouflage, that's because it wasn't designed to hide, but to confuse.
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"We must not confuse censorship with defence of national security," wrote the Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, a Ukrainian NGO.
|
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At one point, a "W", an "O", and a "?" join the "MAN" on the left side to confuse the equilibrium.
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Hide one in a frenemy's house with the ringer on loud and call it a lot to confuse them. 11.
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The easiest way to confuse is just to take a photo or video out of context, mislabeling or mischaracterizing it.
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Scientists aren't sure why the bellies of glassfrogs are see-through, but it may help them avoid or confuse predators.
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When Donald Trump was just starting out as a candidate for the presidency, he used to confuse ratings and polls.
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Catholic conservatives in other countries had also argued that such a change would dilute Catholic identity and confuse the faithful.
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"Remarks made by the Japanese side, which confuse right and wrong, are not worth refuting," Hua said in her statement.
|
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"We don't confuse our customers with yo-yo discounts, sales, coupons, and loyalty cards that require membership fees," he said.
|
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Current AI systems are vulnerable to adversarial examples — inputs designed to confuse them — and more advanced systems might be, too.
|
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But we shouldn't confuse the sins of an unsolicited dick pic with the gift of an enthusiastically consensual dick pic.
|
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And it's easy to confuse Russia's foreign policy with Putin's foreign policy, given how much influence he exercises over it.
|
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Both will feature the ability to confuse passerby on the streets and subways with the flickering lights on your ears.
|
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Bad bosses often disappoint or confuse their teams by presenting inaccurate pictures about how things are at the office — e.g.
|
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There are also concerns that abusers might change home settings such as light levels or door locks to confuse victims.
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If the last few years have shown us anything, it is the power of cataclysmic events to shock and confuse.
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As you read these sentences, you constantly confuse yourself with the content of the self-model activated by your brain.
|
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"Let's not confuse a stock that fell from bubble-like level with a company that can't attract customers," Reeves said.
|
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Unfortunately, just to confuse everyone, the script for the Rose Red project is mashing up the two Snow White tales.
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They are: drunken rambling, cryptic remarks that confuse everyone, offensiveness (accidental or otherwise), pontification, and my personal favorite, unnecessary eroticism.
|
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A variety of deductions tend to confuse taxpayers because the rules are more nuanced or are seemingly subject to interpretation.
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We're looking for false information being spread deliberately to confuse, mislead, or influence voters ahead of the 2018 midterm elections.
|
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They started out so similar, but it's easy to confuse details of birth with the way a man turns out.
|
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It's a close cousin of the pundit fallacy: the tendency to confuse one's own policy wishes with good political advice.
|
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So let's not confuse ourselves by making Auschwitz the axis of our culture and the culmination of our civic religion.
|
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The North Koreans know they're being watched from space and frequently try to hide their work and confuse outside observers.
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Be careful not to confuse a judgment about whether certain conduct is prosecutable with a judgment about whether it happened.
|
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Frye said it was too late to move back the primary and that doing so would confuse and suppress voters.
|
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Bottom line ... he says listen to the CDC and don't confuse curfews and non-essential business closures with martial law.
|
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The Korean coach responded by claiming that he had his players wear different shirt numbers to confuse any possible snoops.
|
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His name is Nicholas Cronk, and he is happy to defend to the death Voltaire's right to confuse us all.
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Many people confuse H.S.A.s with flexible health spending accounts, which are geared toward short-term health needs, Ms. Edwards said.
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This includes any false information being spread deliberately to confuse, mislead, or influence voters ahead of the 21 midterm elections.
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We're looking for false information being spread deliberately to confuse, mislead, or influence voters ahead of the 20103 midterm elections.
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Too many of this year's advertisers seemed to confuse activity for achievement, as if being loud and colorful was enough.
|
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So, Russia is trying everything it can to attempt to divert, distract, confuse and bewilder its audiences around the world.
|
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It is a dizzying array of falsehoods meant to confuse Congress and the American people, and everyone involved knows it.
|
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Heavy rain or snow can confuse current car radar and lidar systems, making it necessary for humans to intervene. Cybersecurity.
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The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said in September that price transparency proposals were a government overreach and would confuse people.
|
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But the President's words, which players say hurt every time he utters them, confuse that vision of the United States.
|
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"What is not on is to confuse liability and responsibility, or to simply mutualise debts without becoming competitive," she said.
|
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But the Interior Department seems adamant, and in response has undertaken a campaign to spread misinformation to confuse the issue.
|
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It'll make you feel fair-minded, and if he ever found out, it would confuse the heck out of him.
|
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If you're a keyboard aficionado, you won't confuse the new Viola switch with any of Cherry's high-end MX switches.
|
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One female board member she interviewed said the chair would sometimes confuse her with the other woman on the board.
|
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"We don't confuse our customers with yo-yo discounts, sales, coupons and loyalty cards that require membership fees," he said.
|
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In this situation, the gunman appears to have intentionally filled it with language to troll and confuse the news media.
|
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In China, researchers have experimented with LED lights on baseball caps to create infrared signals that confuse facial-recognition technology.
|
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But those observations should be presented honestly, and not with terminology that could confuse them with other methods of research.
|
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As he notes, biometrics have been faked before: photographs can confuse face recognition software and 3D printers can outsmart fingerprint scanners.
|
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" The only thing that seemed to confuse Bishop was why there was a fire truck in the middle of a "lake.
|
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"The good thing about this race is that nobody's going to confuse the two of us," Kennedy said of his opponent.
|
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But we are also clear-eyed enough not to confuse an awkward attempt to pick someone up with a sexual attack.
|
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As I said yesterday, don't confuse it with the cheaper or cheesier endless runners you might see on the app store.
|
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While that could mean Open Lab contributes to BuzzFeed's profitability in the end, don't confuse it with an incubator or accelerator.
|
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If there is one place where you might confuse the two new sports cars it's when you slide behind the wheel.
|
|
The SPD's chancellor candidate in 1994 never quite lived down an incident in which he appeared to confuse "gross" and "net".
|
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One of the things that can often happen is that the labels pro-life and pro-choice can confuse the question.
|
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There remains the strong possibility that these "leaked" designs are dead wrong, red herrings cast about by Apple to confuse us.
|
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That may confuse James Cameron, but as Jenkins notes, the film's fans, regardless of gender, seem to understand it well enough.
|
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And it adapted to experimental human trickery like an opponent trying to confuse it by dropping destructible items on the ground.
|
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"I don't want to confuse what might be happy momentarily with what has been going on for 30 years," he said.
|
|
The early signs of Ebola — fatigue, fever, muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhea — can be easy to confuse with the flu or malaria.
|
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To reduce its characters to a collection of plot twists waiting to happen is to confuse their psychological richness for contrivance.
|
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According to the docs ... Herbal intentionally jacked the 'Honest' name to confuse customers into thinking its products are associated with Alba's.
|
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Stickers can be applied to a stop sign to confuse a machine vision system into thinking it's a 45 mph sign.
|
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GettySnapchat announced a huge new set of updates today that will probably delight a lot of teens (and confuse everyone else).
|
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A sweep of the house revealed two tunnels: one beneath the refrigerator, a false tunnel meant to confuse the advancing troops.
|
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"In my country, social media conspiracy groups confuse well-meaning parents so they hesitate to get the recommended vaccinations," Azar said.
|
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You still have an elaborate story mode chock-full of cutscenes, dialogue, and references that will confuse a lapsed DBZ fan.
|
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Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, PEOPLE's 2225 Sexiest Man Alive, claimed on Friday that his good looks used to confuse his peers.
|
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You tie it back over to the 2016 election where Russia was spreading a lot of misinformation to confuse American voters.
|
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As a nation, should never confuse operational success (was the mission accomplished?) with strategic success (did the mission accomplish our goals?).
|
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The list includes hoax sites like Breitbart and InfoWars as well as satirical sites like ClickHole that could confuse some readers.
|
|
Clinicians also have to be particularly careful that they do not confuse the symptoms of depression with the symptoms of autism.
|
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I like to try new ideas and take things to the next level, and hopefully confuse some people along the way.
|
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The show is about Pablo Escobar, and more than a few people seemed to confuse one infamous drug lord with another.
|
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" She concludes, "So, if you're trying to pick me up in a club, please don't confuse me with my sisters, LOL.
|
|
Exactly 15 years ago, Google decided to confuse everybody by launching its long-awaited web-based email client on April 1.
|
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Your intuition is very strong today, Aries, but please don't confuse every thought that passes through your mind for the truth.
|
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If you just want a casual thing, be clear on that and don't confuse people by being misleadingly romantic or familiar.
|
|
These restrictions often confuse concerns about access to data for national security and law enforcement purposes with commercial use of data.
|
|
It is precisely the opposite of these simplistic hero-on-a-white-horse narratives, which only serve to confuse and mystify.
|
|
Generating false content to demoralize, confuse and perturb public attitudes costs Russia far less than traditional, and deadly, forms of aggression.
|
|
I think they sometimes confuse it with those dots Hindus have on their foreheads—the ones that represent a third eye.
|
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We also should not confuse steady improvement in our fish populations with fully achieving the goals of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
|
|
And just to confuse us, Google is also rebranding Google Apps for Work, which also falls under the Google Cloud umbrella.
|
|
"There is zero chance that I would confuse them," Christine Blasey Ford said in a statement reported by The Washington Post.
|
|
The United Way representatives would be picked up in Central Square, blindfolded, and driven around for a while to confuse them.
|
|
The code talkers used their native languages during World Wars I and II to confuse American enemies attempting to break codes.
|
|
A company spokeswoman was very apologetic when I emailed to ask whether this was simply being done to further confuse foreigners.
|
|
We confuse a genuine concern for materialism and consumption with the wish to have a decent spot to live and cherish.
|
|
"They (the Russians) can create a virtual reality that is meant to confuse and achieve certain aims," said one Western diplomat.
|
|
"There have to be some standards on the human-machine interface level," Ms. Papadopol said, "so you don't confuse the driver."
|
|
And, he admitted to laughs, on the off chance it would confuse automatic license plate readers and the DMV's ticketing system.
|
|
The documents released last week provided a look at how the use of a shell corporation can confuse a restitution claim.
|
|
The result is titled "Bankspeak," a play on doublespeak, referring to language that is intentionally ambiguous, meant to obscure or confuse.
|
|
But the notion of information as a substance flowing like electricity works so well that we tend to confuse the two.
|
|
But publishing guides that not only confuse users, but are also filled with inaccurate and dangerous advice, is not the answer.
|
|
Tykables' diapers are such an authentic take on traditional baby brands that companies sometimes confuse them with infant and toddler models.
|
|
Note: Be sure not to confuse the Capital One Spark Cash with the Capital One® Spark® Miles for Business.
|
|
Though no one would confuse the awkward de Blasio with Cicero, he often waxes poetic about his "historic" and "transcendent" successes.
|
|
In one study, Asian-American subjects were more likely to mix up black faces than they were to confuse white ones.
|
|
Pilots however say the control column behaves differently in certain conditions, which could confuse pilots who have flown the earlier model.
|
|
And I'm persuaded that the shutdown is a case in which people shouldn't confuse their rooting interests with smart political advice.
|
|
Now that the report has been released, Trump and his allies are trying to confuse people about what it actually said.
|
|
As Election Day draws near, a growing amount of disinformation is getting published online to confuse, inflame or distract potential voters.
|
|
Let us not confuse between these things so we won't be engulfed once again in those horrific and dismal, dire times.
|
|
Looking at the picture, it's easy to imagine how a family member would confuse the sponsored item for a legit one.
|
|
And they all got on the crazy train for one reason: to try and confuse everyone about a very simple story.
|
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Just because I own you on twitter, don't confuse me for your daddy when it comes to abusing power for sex.
|
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That confuse me completely — an invention that is so not sexy and yet is so fashionable and which is a construction.
|
|
Heaven's Door responded to that letter by saying that it didn't believe consumers would confuse the two brands, the lawsuit said.
|
|
They presented their findings at an international forensics conference to highlight how a bone marrow transplant could, theoretically, confuse an investigation.
|
|
Still, the passions of the moment, Mr. Durbin suggested, have caused some liberals to confuse responsible vetting and decorum with obsequiousness.
|
|
And the President deliberately deployed a strategy of swamping misinformation -- to flood the zone and confuse Americans of the true facts.
|
|
Fundamentally, Slack and Teams are different tools used for different purposes, no matter how much Microsoft wants to confuse the marketplace.
|
|
They confuse the law as it exists and has actually existed with the rule of law as a normative, theoretical idea.
|
|
But we should not confuse the fact that they took extraordinary actions with the notion that they lived in extraordinary times.
|
|
Don't confuse it with bitcoin Crypto insiders caution that the JPM Coin is very different than bitcoin and other crypto currencies.
|
|
It's almost like painting a mustache onto a holy icon: the contrast should confuse and alienate, but somehow, instead, is charming.
|
|
He explains what makes people confuse opinions for facts and why we all think we know more than we actually do.
|
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The shooter in Thousand Oaks, California, wore a baseball cap and set off smoke bombs to confuse people inside the bar.
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With the numbers of arrests increasing every day, you have to be careful not to confuse a prisoner's name or location.
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But don't confuse the pledged PLEO delegates with those unpledged PLEO delegates, aka superdelegates, who don't vote unless there's a contest.
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People confuse you with many of the characters you seem to play, often young, insouciant single women in the big city.
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Memories are beginning to confuse and drive the Hosts — Dolores declares that she can't even distinguish between memories and reality anymore.
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It's been called camouflage to confuse big predators, an identity signal to other zebras and a kind of wearable air conditioner.
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" — JIMMY KIMMEL "Trump just gave an interview where he appeared to confuse Kim Jong-un with his father, Kim Jong-il.
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Do not confuse preapproval with prequalification, which, for some baffling reason, sounds like the same thing but is far from it.
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But with screen time, there has been a concerted effort on the part of Silicon Valley behemoths to confuse the public.
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I went to the University, and there will be two other brown girls in my year, and people would confuse us.
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Just be extra careful not to confuse these toys with the real thing and accidentally serve one up at your next barbecue.
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I am a dyslexic Mexican and English is my second language, however even I do not confuse 7/11 with 9/11.
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In some frames, it's almost impossible to count the number of people present, with limbs and torsos angled to confuse the eye.
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Because of its shape and color, many confuse lesser sirens with mudpuppies, which also live at the bottom of bodies of water.
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Did HBO intentionally make the show look like another Billions-style drama about rich people scheming on purpose, just to confuse us?
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Again, what voters really intended in 2008 is anyone's guess, but it would be hard to confuse the two parties' economic positions.
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The Chicago-based company had argued that Supermac's was too close in name to the trademarked burger and would confuse the public.
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For the challenge, pet owners confuse their furry children by holding up a blanket to hide, then dropping it and running away.
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As if a trendy ring stack from H&M was going to somehow confuse the relationship gods into thinking I was partnered.
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The Young Pope Is Here To Confuse & Delight YouI couldn't use this one because every other site wrote a version of it.
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You have to be careful not to confuse cueritos with chicharrón, which is also pig skin, but fried in a different way.
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Twitter explained its decision then as not wanting to confuse users who may have thought the ad represented Twitter's own political viewpoint.
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But Leo: Freaking out, getting angry, or crying oceans of tears does not equal investment—don't confuse frenzy for emotion or caring.
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For one thing, the shadows in space are much different than shadows on the ground, which could potentially confuse the navigation system.
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Artist-activists have been coming up with designs meant to confuse the facial recognition cameras that are creeping into our public spaces.
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The Cowboy I've been testing is a late-model prototype, probably 95 percent complete, so don't confuse these words with a review.
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But the plant isn't always easy to identify and can be easy to confuse with other flowering plants like Queen Anne's Lace.
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The main groups that could challenge Trump were then provided messaging that sought to confuse, distract, and ultimately discourage members from voting.
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"All of that is an effort to mix up, and to confuse and to stifle this choreographed Democratic production," Zelizer told CNBC.com.
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You probably don't care and almost certainly didn't notice, and so to remedy this situation, Amazon has decided to confuse London's commuters.
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When it's on you, it doesn't sound to your ears like a traditional speaker, nor will you confuse the SoundWear for headphones.
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Don't confuse HSAs with flexible spending accounts, which allow you to pay for medical expenses and dependent care with pre-tax dollars.
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Those sneaky sources of sugar can confuse your brain, and make it more difficult to listen to your body's internal hunger cues.
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The object of this viral endeavor, which has spread across social media, is to confuse your pet with a simple magic trick.
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"Instead of engaging on the substantive concern, Russia has sought to confuse the picture with at best misleading procedural arguments," Rowland said.
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"People will often confuse things – when they hear a business is good for women, it must be a social enterprise," she said.
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"People often confuse us as a single LP fund," Nikhil Kapur — who has been promoted to partner — told TechCrunch in an interview.
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"We do not confuse progress with success," acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Readiness Elizabeth Van Winkle told reporters at the Pentagon.
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I would like a husband that I don't confuse with Matt Damon and I don't think that's too much to ask. 22.
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You know she's already made Fenty huge in the cosmetics and apparel biz, and she's concerned Ronald's org will confuse the marketplace.
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"All these people out here tryna say they confuse Reign for a girl simply cos he has long hair," the user wrote.
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We cannot confuse our allies and allow our enemies to miscalculate our intentions, so they feel they can act without our response.
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Because of that, it can be hard to get a diagnosis, as doctors confuse symptoms with other diseases or discount them entirely.
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The firm claims that Kylie Jenner owning the trademark for the name could confuse Minogue's fans and potentially hurt the singer's brand.
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But the truth is that a lot of the time this extra detail can confuse the eye and be detrimental to gameplay.
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The three year long battle between the pop stars has enough twists and turns to confuse even the most dedicated of fans.
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Those who subscribe to progressive fundamentalism confuse their beliefs for a solution because they embrace the cosmopolitan world those beliefs thrive in.
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In taking her unprecedented action, Yates seemed to confuse her personal and her professional judgment on the defense of this federal policy.
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So maybe Google does need five ads to explain Duo, lest we confuse it for another product in Google's byzantine social labyrinth.
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Intel is making some weird naming changes to its processors this year that are certain to confuse people about what they're buying.
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In the 2016 presidential election, Russian accounts manipulated Facebook, Twitter, and Google users to "confuse, distract and ultimately discourage" them from voting.
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While Trump often seems to confuse the White House counsel with his personal counsel, presidents historically have appointed loyalists to the position.
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This ant is destined for bigger things, but it would be unwise to confuse it with the standard variety tech-industry unicorn.
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Why it matters: Self-driving cars don't exist yet, but many people still confuse today's driver-assist technologies with self-driving capability.
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Don't confuse this with an older Zarick project from 2015, which also combined the two consoles but using a laptop form factor.
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Over the next 17 months, Volkswagen embarked on a campaign to "mislead and confuse" regulators and the public, according to the complaint.
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But when liberals ponder evidence of incivility in our culture, they should not confuse civil engagement with the need for common courtesy.
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The system is usually found on helicopters and uses modulated laser-bases beams to confuse heat-seeking (or infra-red homing) missiles.
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Shepard warned that grafting a "stylistic 'concept' " onto the set design of "True West" would serve only to confuse his characters' evolution.
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Its shallow muddy waters confuse the marine mammals' sonar, leaving them vulnerable to stranding by an ebb tide, according to Project Jonah.
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Nobody would ever confuse Ed Gillespie, who was one of [former president] George W. Bush's top advisers, for a Breitbart-inspired candidate.
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Cochran brilliantly used all of these methods of misdirection to confuse the jury and plant conflicting information and narratives in their minds.
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What makes this problem worse is that companies in this space tend to over-promise and confuse investors with misleading concept videos.
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The Moon in Pisces finds you in a nostalgic mood today—but don't let your daydreams of the past confuse your present.
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If there is one thing he wants investors to take away from "Mad Money, " it is to never confuse these two concepts.
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If there is one thing he wants investors to take away from "Mad Money," it is to never confuse these two concepts.
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Not only would I confuse the hours throughout the day, but my morning alarms weren't calibrated correctly, and I felt consistently disoriented.
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"Often this meant altering the quality, pathway or timing of a gesture, in order to disrupt and confuse its reading," she said.
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In my haste to enrich my daughter's cultural life, I had entered that sad realm of imbeciles who confuse satire for fact.
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But I had some questions for the credit reporting companies, and I tried to anticipate the things that might confuse you, too.
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The aim, as famously explained by the political philosopher Hannah Arendt, is to confuse: to breed a combination of cynicism and gullibility.
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Many will continue to confuse a familiar — and to some, beloved — ritual of American democracy with its essence, which is voter participation.
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If you do it yourself, the legion suggests burning it in private, so others don't confuse your action with a political protest.
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No. But Friday's shocking court decision — which found Michelle Carter guilty of sending lethal text messages — is bound to confuse the issue.
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Many liberals saw the effort as a blatant attempt to disqualify and confuse voters who would be likely to support Democratic candidates.
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It's essential to understand the difference between gender identity and gender expression because people confuse the two terms a lot, Ehrensaft explains.
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" Marshall's son's pose appeared to confuse Ryan, who could be heard in a video asking if the teen was "going to sneeze.
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And it is not just Trump and his campaign who are busy distorting reality on social media to distract and confuse voters.
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When she reaches the limit of what she can know, she doesn't confuse it with the limit of what can be known.
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This is something that's happened a bit with previous cameras (and it's normal for a bit of water to sometimes "confuse" touchscreens).
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While strolling the aisles of CVS and other drugstores, the "As Seen On TV" aisle never fails to intrigue and confuse me.
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Just be careful not to confuse #ootd, the hashtag for "outfit of the day," with O.B.E., the Order of the British Empire.
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CreditCreditJanne Körkkö for The New York Times OULU, Finland — No one would confuse this frigid corner of northern Finland with Silicon Valley.
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It will confuse the enemy, cause destruction and death, impress and frighten the enemy with the power and technology of the people.
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However, in deciding on a doctor, patients need to be cautious not to confuse customer satisfaction with evidence-based, patient-centered care.
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While Champagne snobs who confuse scarcity with quality love to disparage Dom Pérignon, it's an astoundingly great wine despite the quantity made.
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Journalists wrestle with late-night tweets that carry the weight of the presidency but also seem designed only to enrage and confuse.
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Still, this is a drama with a broad curiosity, one that hears every character out but doesn't confuse empathy with excuse-making.
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Analysts have also warned that the ballot itself might confuse voters and result in a higher-than-usual percentage of invalid votes.
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He suggested that Mr. Bolton and other aides were trying to confuse the understanding he had with Mr. Trump over the withdrawal.
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She ultimately outsmarts the Horde (she discovers she can disarm and confuse them by calling Kevin by his full name) and escapes.
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His intention was to stretch and break down the very idea of binary identities, confuse the concept of gender, leave it optional.
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Besides, author Deborah D. Moore writes with a voice so singular in this 2016 cookbook that it's impossible to confuse with Pennington's.
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It makes for a rich, decadent tower of smooth and crispy textures that will confuse your mouth in the best possible way.
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Simple, swift retreats are enough to confuse most of his opponents and create the distance through which he can time his counters.
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I think some people confuse logistical problems of resupplying an island, as opposed to Texas and Florida, with a lack of concern.
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She said the hard-liners drag up issues from the past to confuse people and to "make other issues more important than voting."
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