muddled up

muddle up

1. To render something awkward, confusing, and disorderly; to obscure or obfuscate something. A noun or pronoun can be used between "muddle" and "up." Often used in passive constructions. The introduction of new tariffs is likely to further muddle up the already complicated relationship between the two countries. They muddled the contract up with all sorts of misleading, cryptic language. Our roles within the team have become so muddled up that we've largely given up the idea of job titles.
2. To mix something up (with something else). A noun or pronoun can be used between "muddle" and "up"; often used in passive constructions. They look so alike that I always muddle up their names when I see them. I must have muddled the data points up when I was entering them into the system.
See also: muddle, up

muddled (up)

Drunk. Do you remember last night at the bar at all? You were really muddled up!
See also: muddle
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

muddled (up)

mod. alcohol intoxicated. I’ve had a little too much muddler, I think. Anyway, I’m muddled.
See also: muddle, up
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • add in
  • all right
  • a/the feel of (something)
  • (I) wouldn't (do something) if I were you
  • (you've) got to get up pretty early in the morning to (do something)
  • a straw will show which way the wind blows
  • a crack at (someone or something)
  • (you) wanna make something of it?
  • all for the best
  • a thing of the past
References in periodicals archive
Once PET (plastic bottles) is muddled up with other organic waste it contaminates them, making them more expensive to clean up and use.
Once upon a time, there was a little girl who muddled up her letters and couldn't read, but she was good at painting and making things and make-believe.
So, one day, a wicked witch told her to find a less academic school and held her back a year and told her that people like her would never understand tricky letters that kept getting muddled up.
At least, I think he got good feel muddled up with feelgood.
Speaking of getting words muddled up, here's Dwight Yorke recalling the good old days: "You have beautiful girls all around.
They included husbands and wives who got muddled up with the new system and signed each other's postal votes.
Mr Hinde thought some people had got muddled up with the new system for verifying postal votes.
It was further learnt that some staff of the commission in the know about the plan to frustrate the election had taken delivery of their side of the assignments with levity, even as some of them were said to have also muddled up the accreditation of local and international observers.