bewilder• For those unemployed and with a family, the added worry of responsibility for the next generation must be bewildering.• The old general store had gone but the shadethorn tree was still there, bewildered by its surround of concretepavement.• His doctors were bewildered by the cause of such severehives.• You could hardly blame them, though, for feeling bewildered from time to time.• But it bewildered him and, in a sense, made him resentful.• The old men, terrified, bewildered, huddled together.• The money that changes hands can take a bewilderingvariety of forms and flow in variousdirections.
Originbewilder
(1600-1700)wilder“to lead the wrong way, confuse”((17-19 centuries)), perhaps from wilderness