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141 Sentences With "muddies"

How to use muddies in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "muddies" and check conjugation/comparative form for "muddies". Mastering all the usages of "muddies" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And her rise also muddies Sanders' path to the nomination.
It really muddies the water in such a dangerous, dangerous way.
Unfortunately, the use of the royal prerogative muddies the democratic waters.
Go deeper: Trump tweet muddies the waters regarding NASA's Moon mission
Part of what muddies this trickle-down is the myriad interests involved.
But they'll also make a profit on it, which muddies the motives.
But this Groundhog Day-style revelation he talks about muddies the revelatory waters.
The movie that muddies the waters is 2016's Captain America: Civil War.
But unlike the FTC and the courts, the DSA's position muddies the waters.
Still, piggybacking on the "Avengers" narrative represents an advantage that somewhat muddies the analysis.
The real-world scenes, though, are stylized in a way that muddies the perspective.
That potentially muddies the waters over which foreign government the Chinese would square off with.
That obviously muddies whether and to what extent it can be considered a mass shooting.
"The social media, it muddies up stuff so badly," said Mr. Stanley, who is 50.
The fact that Lisa appears to be an excellent kindergarten teacher muddies the waters even further.
And that's all the conspiracy needs: immense attention that muddies the issue and confuses the public.
No definitive data exist, and the constant ebb and flow of contract workers muddies the picture.
This new report further muddies the Trump administration&aposs shifting justifications for directing the Soleimani strike.
It's a strategy that muddies stark differences between Trump and his rivals, and helps neutralize political vulnerabilities.
There's a fair amount of noise that usually gets into your microphone and muddies up your speech.
By bringing up reports of electronic surveillance and intercepts and all that, he further muddies the water.
Do you think that behavior muddies the water between ethical hackers and bug bounty programs and bribery?
The question of whether Cliff is a cold-blooded murderer muddies any idea of him being heroic.
The trade war further muddies Bianco's outlook because it's slowing demand for industrial goods across the world.
Power muddies the waters, demanding a specific response when BoJack ultimately wants to contemplate more universal ones.
Savinio muddies his approach by interjecting solidly rendered but unnamable geometric and biomorphic shapes into conventional illusionism.
The entire debate is mashing up fantasy action with real-world consequences in a way that muddies both.
The shifting messaging — and debate over who deserves credit for what — only muddies the main takeaway, experts say.
But reselling ISAs muddies the narrative a bit since Lambda can make money long before students find jobs.
The media has devised a narrative about the Ghost Ship fire that muddies the truth about the tragedy.
Positing a world where women are rapists just muddies the conversation, because that's not the world we live in.
"The introduction of these financial interests muddies the water enough that people don't know who to trust," she said.
The stew of factors muddies responsibility and has left each party rushing to tar the other with negative headlines.
"This just muddies the water further and confuses consumers," said Guerra, whose firm manages $1.3 billion in client assets.
He vehemently supports anything that might protect his pigs and says that talk of refugees just muddies the issue.
By forcing British authorities to respond to superficially ludicrous claims, it muddies the waters with British and international audiences.
For those concerned about reducing the deficit, conflating cost-saving measures with cutting benefits muddies the waters, analysts say.
Sound will ping-pong around, causing excessive reverb trails which muddies what you hear, and makes speech hard to understand.
The identity of Mayweather's opponent, Japanese kickboxer Tenshin Nasukawa — a fighter half the American's age — muddies the waters yet further.
You know, we are winning those battles now," Lofgren continued, adding that impeachment "just muddies the issue and damages us.
It tries out new jokes, with mixed results, and muddies the dark-light morality that's driven the series for so long.
But Wednesday night's statement from the company muddies the water about how the company plans to interact with the Trump brand.
Most concerns circle around logistics, although in Illinois trial attorneys have lobbied against a proposed program, saying it muddies liability issues.
This is part of what muddies the politics of environmental regulation: Costs are specific and concentrated; benefits are uncertain and diffuse.
Established players are already trying mightily to avoid fraud and corruption and Agora's claim, no matter how plausible, further muddies those waters.
The Honor 8 wins on contrast, but seems to have a blurry sheen on everything, muddies details, and has less natural lighting.
That he still refuses to release his tax returns, like every candidate and president since the Watergate era, also muddies the water.
And once again, it's a case of the hardware outshining the software, even as it muddies the waters around Google's Chromebook strategy.
And then the complaints about Apple's power to levy a tax on developers from the App Store muddies the waters even further.
Trump is more complicated, since his past embrace of liberal policies muddies the question of where he fits on the liberal-conservative spectrum.
Crafting the perfect exception to CDA 230 is not theoretically impossible, but then there is an additional practical aspect that muddies the waters.
Which muddies the water a bit when it comes to amateur wrestlers making the decision about moving from the mat to the cage.
But it's hard to imagine them mending their relationship so long as Trump tweets impulsively and muddies IC conclusions publicly for egotistical reasons. 
The complicated process "further muddies supply chain transparency efforts" for companies that strive to only use safe and ethical extraction, Verisk Maplecroft said.
"This further muddies the litigation on this issue," said Stephen Yale-Loehr, an immigration attorney with Miller-Mayer and Cornell Law School professor.
Like Pet Sematary, there are themes of grieving and parenthood, and like many other King stories, the protagonist's psychological breakdown muddies the waters.
His research, however, muddies the waters on whether Starship 1 can truly lay claim to having the first Easter egg in a video game.
Second, it potentially muddies the waters around any women who step forward in the future by providing a flimsy excuse to attack their credibility.
"Any time he steps up and tries to equate two groups or two conversations, I think that muddies the water," he said of Trump.
Some economists said that higher inflation data, in itself, muddies the picture for the Fed, since it has been looking for below normal inflation.
Republicans are clearly desperate for a news story to distract from Trump's obvious abuses of power, or for new information that muddies the water.
This misstatement by Comey further muddies the conversation about what exact role he played in the 2016 election and what role he wanted to play.
The U.S. government's politicized response to the symptoms, expelling Cuban diplomats during an ongoing investigation and halting consular services in Havana, further muddies the waters.
Adding the charge of bad faith to that of bad judgment only muddies the water, making objective reflection and enduring lessons more difficult to achieve.
The TV Crisis may serve to clean some of that up just as the comics Crisis did, but not before it muddies things even further.
And it muddies the water — because it's harder for people to say this kind of person is attacking you, this kind of person is attacking you.
Though it should be said that the baby Gamora scene at the end muddies the waters a little and possibly opens the door for her return.
The social worker pleaded that we leave him alone and I wasn't about to punch a kid, so there's an example that immediately muddies the waters.
Building two versions of the Yoga Book muddies the "mobile first" message a bit, especially since Windows 10 has a more traditional desktop feel than Android.
Scalia's death muddies an already murky situation, as Justice Samuel Alito recused himself from the case, potentially due to some financial holdings that could be impacted.
But since President Trump took office, some groups have found a new cause that further muddies the waters between far-right activists, to say the least.
A symptom of that problem is frequent and inexplicable self-contradiction, which may happen often enough in life but muddies the logic of a shortish play.
That "muddies Clouse's track record a little, but he's had a good track record for years and he's still an ideal candidate for Campbell," Weissman said.
The company says the majority of those accounts aren't active long enough to get counted in MAU totals, anyway, but it muddies the numbers a bit.
"The harm is that it actually muddies the independent scientific literature," said Jennifer Sass, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group.
The letter muddies Juul's attempts to rebrand itself and adds another headache to the company, which is already battling accusations that it fueled a teen vaping epidemic.
So I think adding this kind of Blue Lives Matter piece to the hate crimes statute muddies the waters and confuses the education piece quite a bit.
Where Bécquer imagines two distinct roles in the conflated artistic and romantic relationships — poet and poetry, man and woman, self and other — Castellanos muddies the self/other binary.
This possibility muddies the water considerably for the rest of us, who occasionally find solace in the widely accepted fact that Hollywood romance doesn't exist in real life.
Mr. Keller was a leader in the service-included model of pricing, although he muddies the waters by leaving a line for an optional gratuity on the check.
At this point, it may not be possible to reach a verdict without seeing the actual design, and the missing context surrounding these options further muddies the situation.
But on some other level, we all know that an actual rabbit is right to be afraid of an actual fox — and that muddies the movie's message considerably.
Christie's says most scholars agree that the painting is by Leonardo, though some critics have questioned the attribution and some say the extensive restoration muddies the work's authorship.
With that eye, nothing will come into focus, and its intrusion on my intact left eye sometimes slows my reading, muddies my thinking, leaves me with a woozy feeling.
A central tension in the field, one that muddies the timeline, is how "the Singularity"—the point when technology becomes so masterly it takes over for good—will arrive.
IRL, it's actually so fast and so ground-hugging that it kind of muddies your brain a bit to look at it operating in a world where physics still exists.
And by lumping her speech fees in with donations to the Clinton Foundation, whose direct effect on the family's wealth remains murky, it muddies an otherwise clear line of attack.
Where we once thought of music with identifiable creators as "art," and the Muzak we hear in malls and doctors' waiting rooms as generic background audio, streaming muddies that distinction.
Deutch said he's been working for several months with Republican offices on different legislation that prices carbon, and that Curbelo choosing to go in his own direction muddies the waters.
He called the claims about Ukraine's interference in 2016 "unfortunate" because "it muddies the waters," and noted that Russia's attempts to blame Ukraine are not inconsistent with its standard disinformation tactics.
From a platform for anti-colonialist sentiment to a gateway for the incursion of Western culture, digital technology muddies the boundary between colonialist and subaltern, reactionary and dissident, indigenous and non-indigenous.
It is irresponsible to apportion blame for a crime without clear verification, regardless of previous guilt; it not only victimizes the innocent but also muddies the water in identifying those truly responsible.
The general lack of context around how Wikileaks operates, as well as the website's habit of taking to Twitter with unhinged accusations against Clinton, often muddies the points Assange tries to make.
But it is no simple matter to modernize these systems as politics muddies the waters and everyone has different ideas of how this should work in the brave new world of work.
To top it all off, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), in normal times a branch of the federal government we count on to protect our most vulnerable, also muddies the waters.
All too often, responding or engaging starts a downward spiral that often makes matters worse and muddies the waters for the victim when they do finally seek assistance from the legal system.
Atmospheric if narratively thin, "The Wind" (similarities to the 1928 silent film of the same name are coincidental) kicks up a competitive dynamic between the two women that further muddies the psychological waters.
Beyond that, if the shutdown drags on long enough so that it muddies the debate over lifting the debt ceiling, then we will likely be looking at a superstorm of pain and discord.
The official situation right now is that the US has banned its domestic companies from engaging in business with Huawei, which includes Honor, though there's been a 90-day reprieve that muddies the situation.
Conflicted research distorts the research agenda, confuses the public about what to eat, muddies dietary advice, and reduces public trust in science—none of these are good for the health of people or society.
This damages the reliability and credibility of social research, muddies the telos of the university, and undermines pedagogy — because there's nobody present to challenge the entrenched yet questionable orthodoxies that tend to settle in.
Nominating a candidate whose name is synonymous with corruption only muddies the waters, making it easy for Republicans to cry hypocrisy and for voters across the country to say that "both parties" are rotten.
But there's one very high-profile case that significantly muddies Twitter's explanation of verification as a simple tool to tell who's who: Milo Yiannopoulos, the right-wing provocateur who lost his verified status last year.
Fox's promotion of Trump's agenda and narrative, at the same time that Trump attacks and diminishes other, more legitimate and unbiased news sources, sufficiently muddies the water for enough people, especially those who support him.
"But what I find is that our culture sort of muddies that a little bit, and acts as though there's a morality involved in terms of nutrition or quality of the food you're eating," she says.
While the Justice Department's approach muddies the waters and makes it more difficult for legitimate criticism and reasoned regulation of the social media platforms to take hold, there are legitimate issues that legislators need to address.
Their claim is that the decision threatens the franchise business model and muddies the legal waters for all employers – even though the NLRB made clear in its decision that Browning Ferris is NOT a franchise case.
And, because Trump doesn't know the details, he just wings it and, in the process, muddies an already-difficult challenge of convincing wavering Republicans to be for a bill that may never go anywhere in the Senate.
Enter Hudson's brainchild, the "UNU Jargon Buster" glossary app for smartphones, with about 450 A-to-Z entries from AAR to WTO, aims to decipher the global organization's penchant for vernacular that some say muddies public debate.
Giuliani's back-and-forth further muddies the timeline of the business dealings behind the now-defunct plans to build Trump Tower Moscow, plans which have drawn questions about possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian officials.
"The introduction of these financial interests muddies the water enough that people don't know who to trust," As mentioned, scientists associated with CRISPR companies were not the only ones, or even the first, to criticize the study's design.
Many faculty members — especially at schools where the teaching load is heavy and resources few — have become eager participants in what experts call academic fraud that wastes taxpayer money, chips away at scientific credibility, and muddies important research.
After tax cuts, rising incomes and buoyant stock markets set off a consumer boom in 2018, signs are emerging that the main engine of U.S. economic growth could sputter, and a record-long government shutdown further muddies the waters.
"It complicates everything on a political level, on a personal level, and it just makes everything that could have been so neat and kind of perfect for Jon and Dany — it really muddies the waters," says showrunner David Benioff.
MARRAKESH, Morocco (Reuters) - Donald Trump's election as U.S. president muddies the outlook for efforts to cut greenhouse gases and could mean U.S. emissions stay flat until 2030, compared with deep cuts planned by President Barack Obama, scientists said on Thursday.
Now Wasserman is challenging two broadly accepted understandings of the 2020 presidential race: that Joe Biden's moderation muddies his chance to lead a left-leaning Democratic Party, while his broad acceptability and blue-collar appeal makes him the strongest Democrat against Trump.
The fact that Farrow and Allen's son Ronan, who has built his career as a journalist exposing the sexual assault patterns of powerful men (including Harvey Weinstein and Les Moonves), has issued a statement condemning the story, muddies the waters even further.
The problem – whatever the motivations of the use of the word "Yid" by Spurs supporters – is that it muddies the water, and allows people to say: 'No, we're not anti-semitic, we're just talking about Spurs fans and they use the word themselves.
But I think it sort of muddies the water to ascribe ill intent, at least to the folks that I saw really trying hard to get this right and often failing, but trying to hard to get it right during the Obama administration. 
Most of their series comprise three separate shapes—a snowman, a bulb, and a cherry blossom petal; a hedgehog, a bird, and a whale—which muddies the waters somewhat: You don't immediately know when someone responds to shape and when someone responds to color.
Trump Jr. is basically taking the opposite approach of his father, who often muddies the GOP's get-out-the-vote message on the campaign trail by telling supporters to be skeptical of polls, suggesting several times that a blue wave is overhyped by the media.
What muddies Cruel Intentions' moral waters is that most of the people who get screwed over kind of deserve it; everyone is so hideously flawed that whoever we're supposed to be rooting for at any given time is never in our favor for long.
The move further muddies the water over a vote next week on the EU withdrawal bill, which May needs to pass to sever ties with the bloc and "copy and paste" its laws into British legislation so the country can function after March next year.
Mr. Bong, one of the great visual storytellers working in movies today — earlier films like "The Host" and "Snowpiercer" have shown him to be an artist of Spielbergian exuberance and skill — never muddies the frame with extraneous stuff or slows the narrative with tedious exposition.
The conversation offered great background on the misinformation – or the lack of information altogether – that muddies the infrastructure development process in the U.S. Traditionally, governments monitor the state of their physical infrastructure manually – as in they literally have someone drive around and mark down how things look.
But trade muddies the usual partisan lines, with free traders and skeptics of globalization in both parties, and the dynamics were further complicated by the announcement this week by General Motors that it will eliminate 14,000 jobs and idle five plants in the United States and Canada.
Read: The Mueller report makes a damning case that Trump obstructed justice "They apparently believe they have an effective counter-argument, or at least one that muddies the water, and that by pushing it out there, they can make Mueller look either less competent or less fair," Arenberg said.
But Mr. Trump's invocation of Mr. Obama and the nuclear deal muddies his message, analysts said, by turning the spotlight away from the Iranian government's economic failures — which have given rise to this powerful, if inchoate, protest movement — to the lingering debate in Washington over the nuclear agreement.
One national security official said Russia's only clear aim, as of now, is to sow discord in the US. O'Brien muddies the waters National security adviser Robert O'Brien discussed the intelligence briefing with his own remarkable lack of nuance in an interview on CBS' "Face the Nation" Sunday.
She becomes convinced, against the word of doctors, that she's carrying the dead man's child, which muddies the arrangements for her next marriage, to a Russian paying a premium to take advantage of her newfound Belgian citizenship, and puts her on the wrong side of the gangsters who set up the deal.
Part of the trick is that something like a lidar unit requires additional compute power attached to the back, and all that extra weight muddies the control algorithms: Just as a horse moves differently with a human on its back, Spot must adapt to a heavier payload to maintain its famous deftness.
But the line between human being and character is even less clearly defined in MMA than it is in pro wrestling, and McGregor muddies it further by occasionally dropping the facade and slipping into a more humble and earnest mode, as he did in conceding defeat to Nate Diaz in his post-fight interview.
Axe takes the bait and further muddies the waters to ensure that his short bet will pay out: He pays a doctor to create a toxin that will taint the juice on the day of the IPO, and he hires people to drink the contaminated batches and vomit all over the stock's potential earnings.
But the subsequent Russia-Turkey Sochi Agreement muddies any clarity to the situation on the ground; in tandem with Turkey's Peace Spring operation and the SDF's piecemeal deals to bring in Syrian regime and Russian forces in specific locations, the northeast has become a much less stable (and much smaller) platform for our D-ISIS mission.
He also has an important tie to black voters: his loyal service to the first black president of the United States, Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaGOP rep rails against Democrats for rejecting Republican impeachment amendment The Hill's 12:30 Report — Presented by UANI — House panel debates terms for impeachment vote The Post muddies the water on war in Afghanistan MORE.
" He argued that a recently revealed meeting in the summer of 2016 between Donald Trump Jr. and an emissary for two Arab princes only muddies the waters of a possible Russia-Trump partnership, adding, "One could go mad trying to prove that Donald Trump Jr. tried to collude with the Russians or the Saudis or the Emiratis, as opposed to being a dunce.
You can see this in the way Zuckerberg fuzzes and elides what his company really does with people's data; and how he muddies and muddles uses for the data — such as by saying he doesn't know what shadow profiles are; or claiming users can download 'all their data'; or that ad profiles are somehow essential for security; or by repurposing 2FA digits to personalize ads too.
Halford muddies her chronology in the memoir, but the tick-tock of Oswald Chambers in her life would read something like this: she first met him at thirteen in Texas when her grandmother gave her a copy of My Utmost for His Highest to celebrate her baptism, and she started reading him regularly a few years after that, at Barnard College and then at Cambridge University.
On Ukraine, he was blistering in his criticism of Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaGOP rep rails against Democrats for rejecting Republican impeachment amendment The Hill's 12:30 Report — Presented by UANI — House panel debates terms for impeachment vote The Post muddies the water on war in Afghanistan MORE and other world leaders like Germany's Angela Merkel for not more forcefully supporting Ukraine against Russian aggression.
"I don't think any of us have any question that had Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaGOP rep rails against Democrats for rejecting Republican impeachment amendment The Hill's 12:30 Report — Presented by UANI — House panel debates terms for impeachment vote The Post muddies the water on war in Afghanistan MORE engaged in the activity, the conduct which is the subject of these articles of impeachment, every one of these Republicans would be voting to impeach him," Schiff said.
In the 2628 general election, Democratic nominee Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTrump rallies supporters as he becomes third president to be impeached Saagar Enjeti dismisses new Biden campaign ad as 'Hillary Clinton 28500' Hillary Clinton says 6900 election will be 'closer than one would like or expect' MORE had lost the 2628 nomination race to Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaGOP rep rails against Democrats for rejecting Republican impeachment amendment The Hill's 28503:22019 Report — Presented by UANI — House panel debates terms for impeachment vote The Post muddies the water on war in Afghanistan MORE and in 2016 faced significant opposition on the left from Sen.

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