Muddle
51muddle through something — muddle through (something) to continue despite confusion and difficulties. My grandparents muddled through droughts and crop failures and family crises …
52muddle through — (something) to continue despite confusion and difficulties. My grandparents muddled through droughts and crop failures and family crises …
53muddle-headed — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ disorganized or confused …
54muddle through — intransitive verb : to achieve a degree of success without a decisive plan mankind … only learns enough from glaciers, floods, and wars to muddle through Henry Hewes social legislation muddled through in the right direction W.A.Orton suffered… …
55muddle along — phrasal verb muddle along or muddle on [intransitive] Word forms muddle along : present tense I/you/we/they muddle along he/she/it muddles along present participle muddling along past tense muddled along past participle muddled along to continue… …
56muddle through — PHRASAL VERB If you muddle through, you manage to do something even though you do not have the proper equipment or do not really know how to do it. [V P] We will muddle through and just play it day by day... [V P n] The BBC may be able to muddle… …
57muddle through — phrasal verb [intransitive] Word forms muddle through : present tense I/you/we/they muddle through he/she/it muddles through present participle muddling through past tense muddled through past participle muddled through to succeed in doing… …
58muddle-headedness — See muddle headed. * * * …
59muddle through — verb To succeed (often clumsily) despite being il equipped or untrained. Ive only had a few lessons, but I can muddle through the practical test …
60muddle-headed — adjective Thinking in a muddled way; not thinking clearly The Prime Minister provoked a backlash led by Sir Jonathon Porritt, chairman of the Governments Sustainable Development Commission, who said Mr Blairs leadership on the issue in Britain… …