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mix-up
[miks-uhp]
noun
a confused state of things; muddle; tangle.
a fight.
mix-up
noun
a confused condition or situation
informal, a fight
verb
to make into a mixture
to mix up ingredients
to confuse or confound
Tom mixes John up with Bill
(often passive) to put (someone) into a state of confusion
I'm all mixed up
to involve (in an activity or group, esp one that is illegal)
why did you get mixed up in that drugs racket?
informal, to fight
Word History and Origins
Origin of mix-up1
Idioms and Phrases
Confuse, confound, as in His explanation just mixed me up even more , or I always mix up the twins . [c. 1800]
Involve or implicate. This usage is usually put in the passive, as in He got mixed up with the wrong crowd . [Mid-1800s]
Example Sentences
The mix-up came about after a packaging supplier mistakenly shipped empty Celsius cans to the vodka seltzer company High Noon, which filled them with alcohol.
Their son Miten said the mix-up was "obviously very upsetting," even though he acknowledged that mistakes happen.
It is unclear what caused the caller’s zoological mix-up.
A woman who was wrongly accused of shoplifting toilet roll due to an apparent mix-up with a facial recognition system was left "fuming" after being ejected from two Home Bargains stores.
In April, for example, a 28-year-old Welsh tourist was held for 19 days in an ICE processing centre in Washington state after being denied entry to Canada over what she later termed a "visa mix-up".
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