Filled with confusion or bewilderment; puzzled. 困惑的,费解的充满困惑或昏乱的;令人费解的
A state of perplexity, confusion, or bewilderment. 迷惑困惑、迷惑或糊涂的状态
A state of depression or bewilderment. 沮丧沮丧或困惑的状态
bewilderment
[ noun ] confusion resulting from failure to understand <noun.cognition>
Bewilderment \Be*wil"der*ment\, n. 1. The state of being bewildered.
2. A bewildering tangle or confusion.
He . . . soon lost all traces of it amid bewilderment of tree trunks and underbrush. --Hawthorne.
But even among such cool heads there is bewilderment at constant claims that the group will be out of the red by the end of this year. According to analysts' calculations, a loss of around DM700m (Pounds 270m) is unavoidable.
'A test pilot for Johnny Walker' according to Jim, Charlie is supposed to be in a state of senile bewilderment, mixing his 'Chippendales' with his 'Chipperfields', and the object of easy laughter.
The Tass account was headlined "Insulting Vigil at Lenin Monument in Donetsk," and said passers-by expressed anger and bewilderment at the protest.
L. Gordon Crovitz's July 21 editorial-page article, "Contingency Fees and the Common Good," roused in me a series of emotions ranging from sadness, through relived anger, to astonishment and ending with complete bewilderment.
He has a boyish bewilderment that seems exactly right, considering the odd but sweet plot.
The experts investors listen to profess no bewilderment, of course, though their collective opinions cover the entire spectrum of economic scenarios.
The courts have begun to see bits of the problem that surface occasionally in legislation, and by and large have reacted with justified bewilderment.
Dismay and bewilderment have been replaced by a cautious pragmatism.
Only the roaring dunes roar. At first, the sight of Louw sliding down the near-sheer surface of the sandy crest caused me some bewilderment.
This forlorn generation present the most visible sign of a society in shock, although bewilderment at the rate and depth of change reaches far beyond it.
Adding to the bewilderment is the jargon associated with letting people go: "three and three" plans, Social Security "bridges" and "pension actuarial forgiveness."
I just tried to help them stand up." Their parents' bewilderment was mirrored across the land as teen-agers became runaways into a world of drug experimentation and violence.
Rather a mix of anxiety, anger, bewilderment and indifference as worries about the future surfaced. 'I'm just sitting and waiting to see if my husband's still got a job,' said Mrs Yvonne Turk, a teacher.
In 1938, one day after his "War of the Worlds" broadcast had panicked radio listeners, Orson Welles expressed "deep regret" but also bewilderment that anyone had thought the Martian invasion portrayed was real.
He is, in short, a transvestite. Shock for audience; nervous giggles from his new landlady Julie Walters; and then the sweet unfolding of a twin-track plot about passion en travestie, Pasdar bedding Miss W, and bewilderment in the boardroom.
In the halls of Berlin's Humboldt University, and on Japanese television talk shows, there is bewilderment and anger at American griping.
President Bush is voicing bewilderment over claims that sensitive Iran-Contra documents _ including some dealing with his own actions _ were withheld from congressional investigators.
Above all, there is no ready moral which we can extract after the film, which might make up for our bewilderment during it as we search for motive/reason/explanation. No ready moral except one.