Muddy the water(s) In english explanation

The meaning, explanation, definition and origin of the idiom/phrase "muddy the water(s)", English Idiom Dictionary ( also found in Vietnamese )

author Zack Phuc calendar 2021-07-16 12:07

Meaning of Muddy the water(s)

Muddy the water(s) verb phrase

To make an issue or situation less clear and less easy to understand

He muddied the waters with unrelated issues at the beginning of his presentation.

Don't muddy the waters unimportant details. Get to the point!

Muddying the waters by adding unnecessary details is the reason why you can't get high marks on your essays.

Other phrases about:

kill or cure

Something that only has one of two different end results: positive or negative

mumbo jumbo

Used to refer to speech or writing that is nonsensical or overly complicated, consequently incomprehensible.
 

all around Robin Hood's barn
Going on a long, indirect route to get to the destination
slippery customer
  1. An unreliable individual, group, or company.
  2. An individual who is hard to see through.
  3. Something or someone which is unclear to define.
winding

Used to depict a path, river, road, etc. repeatedly turning in different directions.

Grammar and Usage of Muddy the water(s)

Verb Forms

  • muddied the waters
  • muddies the water
  • muddying the waters

The verb "muddy" should be conjugated according to its tense.

Origin of Muddy the water(s)

None
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TODAY
to rob the cradle
have a romantic or sexual relationship with or marry someone much younger than oneself.
Example: The middle aged man robbed the cradle with the teenager.
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