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confound
[kon-found, kuhn-, kon-found]
verb (used with object)
to perplex or amaze, especially by a sudden disturbance or surprise; bewilder; confuse.
The complicated directions confounded him.
to throw into confusion or disorder.
The revolution confounded the people.
to throw into increased confusion or disorder.
to treat or regard erroneously as identical; mix or associate by mistake.
truth confounded with error.
to mingle so that the elements cannot be distinguished or separated.
to damn (used in mild imprecations).
Confound it!
to contradict or refute.
to confound their arguments.
to put to shame; abash.
Archaic.
to defeat or overthrow.
to bring to ruin or naught.
Obsolete., to spend uselessly; waste.
confound
/ kənˈfaʊnd /
verb
to astound or perplex; bewilder
to mix up; confuse
to treat mistakenly as similar to or identical with (one or more other things)
to curse or damn (usually as an expletive in the phrase confound it! )
to contradict or refute (an argument, etc)
to rout or defeat (an enemy)
obsolete, to waste
Other Word Forms
- confounder noun
- confoundable adjective
- interconfound verb (used with object)
- preconfound verb (used with object)
- unconfound verb (used with object)
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of confound1
Example Sentences
In what was a confounding series sweep to the Pirates at PNC Park, the Dodgers’ 5-3 defeat on Thursday was easiest to explain.
Golf is a game with few guarantees but Fleetwood, the Olympic silver medallist in Paris, has undoubtedly corrected a confounding anomaly with this victory.
Or later, as he sought photographic evidence of the Mars canals: “We must secure some canals to confound the skeptics” — which, today, carries eerie echoes of “Find me the votes.”
It makes me think about who I am, especially as I grow older, as I become both more attuned to and confounded by who it is I think I am.
Such miscalculations point to another pitfall facing those who would dare to predict the future of Los Angeles: Change has come so rapidly that any prediction can be confounded within the lifetime of its author.
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