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Jumble   /dʒˈəmbəl/   Listen
Jumble

noun
1.
A confused multitude of things.  Synonyms: clutter, fuddle, mare's nest, muddle, smother, welter.
2.
Small flat ring-shaped cake or cookie.  Synonym: jumbal.
3.
A theory or argument made up of miscellaneous or incongruous ideas.  Synonyms: hodgepodge, patchwork.
verb
(past & past part. jumbled; pres. part. jumbling)
1.
Be all mixed up or jumbled together.  Synonym: mingle.
2.
Assemble without order or sense.  Synonyms: confuse, mix up.
3.
Bring into random order.  Synonyms: scramble, throw together.



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"Jumble" Quotes from Famous Books



... jumble of excitedly jabbering Star men when they arrived there. Guns waved about, and the various groups were showing a marked tendency to stand with their backs toward one another and their ...
— Lion Loose • James H. Schmitz

... gift he could bestow upon his mother-land. No great ovations greeted this strange luggage of his; I think he was ashamed of it afterwards,—if Cobbett was ever ashamed of anything. He became candidate for Parliament in the Liberal interest; he undertook those famous "Rural Rides" which are a rare jumble of sweet rural scenes and crazy political objurgation. Now he hammers the "parsons,"—now he tears the paper-money to rags,—and anon he is bitter upon Malthus, Ricardo, and the Scotch "Feelosofers,"—and closes his anathema with the charming picture of a wooded "hanger," up which ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 83, September, 1864 • Various

... own living, I may state, and a very considerable one, for she is famous and highly successful in her branch of artistic endeavor. Socially, one may say of her, in that atrocious phrase which implies a queer jumble of values, that she is "very much in demand." But, though a man in livery opens her front door, the street-cars bring quite as many guests to her house as do ...
— Penguin Persons & Peppermints • Walter Prichard Eaton

... attentions towards them. They were loaded with presents of all descriptions; for, finding they generally got what they begged for, while here, they importuned everyone they met, and they used daily to return home burthened with the most miscellaneous and extraordinary jumble of commodities it was possible to conceive; for, as everything they then beheld was new to them, and might be (they thought) of some service to them in their own country, each trifle was of great value in their estimation, and was carefully ...
— A Narrative of a Nine Months' Residence in New Zealand in 1827 • Augustus Earle

... the climate of Central California to the north.[A] Other striking climatic conditions are produced by the daily interaction of the Pacific Ocean and the Colorado Desert, infinitely diversified in minor particulars by the exceedingly broken character of the region—a jumble of bare mountains, fruitful foot-hills, and rich valleys. It would be only from a balloon that one could get an adequate ...
— Our Italy • Charles Dudley Warner


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