Mystified in A Sentence

    1

    Claiming that the public is mystified by fashion and Rachel Zoe.

    2

    His intentions, as exhibited to his famous Landelove (National Code), were progressive and enlightened to an eminent degree; so much so, indeed, that they mystified the people as much as they alienated the patricians; but his actions were often of revolting brutality, and his whole career was vitiated by an incurable double-mindedness which provoked general distrust.

    3

    It is still an unsettled question whether she simply mystified people, or whether she was really employed by the queen for some unknown purpose, perhaps to ruin the cardinal.

    4

    Many people are mystified about how the rash guard products even work.

    5

    Slowly she looks up at me with dreamy, soulless eyes, mystified.

    6

    The public was at first greatly mystified by the nature and object of this poem, which was not merely a chronicle of Tennyson's emotions under bereavement, nor even a statement of his philosophical and religious beliefs, but, as he long afterwards explained, a sort of Divina Commedia, ending with happiness in the marriage of his youngest sister, Cecilia Lushington.

    7

    There was the sharp rejoinder of unbelief, matched by the reverent mystified faith of the few who refused to go away.