bewildered; confused - (prenominal)
execrable; damned
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
con•founded /ˌkɑnˈfaʊndɪd/USA pronunciation adj. [before a noun]
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026- (used to express irritation with the person or thing named):The confounded plane is late.
con•found•ed
(kon foun′did, kən-),USA pronunciation adj.
con•found′ed•ly, adv.
con•found′ed•ness, n.
- bewildered;
confused;
perplexed. - damned (used euphemistically):That is a confounded lie.
- 1325–75; Middle English; see confound, -ed2
con•found′ed•ness, n.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
con•found /kənˈfaʊnd/USA pronunciation
v. [~ + object]
con•found•ing•ly, adv.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026- to amaze;
confuse;
perplex:The army's lightning attack confounded the enemy. - [~ + object + with + object] to mix up by mistake;
This analysis confounded truth with errors and lies.
- Confound it! (used as a mild oath to express one's irritation): Confound it! Pick up those books now!
con•found•ing•ly, adv.
con•found
(kon found′, kən-; for 6 usually kon′found′),USA pronunciation v.t.
con•found′a•ble, adj.
con•found′er, n.
con•found′ing•ly, adv.
- to perplex or amaze, esp. 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.
- [Obs.]to spend uselessly;
waste.
- Latin confundere to mix, equivalent. to con- con- + fundere to pour
- Anglo-French confoundre
- Middle English conf(o)unden 1250–1300
con•found′er, n.
con•found′ing•ly, adv.
- 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged dumbfound, daze, nonplus, astound.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
to astound or perplex; bewilder to mix up; confuse to treat mistakenly as similar to or identical with (one or more other things) - /
kɒnˈfaʊnd/ 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)
'confounded' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
blamed
- blasted
- confound
- consarned
- cottonpickin'
- darned
- deuced
- dogged
- doggone
- dratted
- fucking
- infernal
- jiggered
- open-mouthed
- thunderstruck