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41 Sentences With "mucked up"

How to use mucked up in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "mucked up" and check conjugation/comparative form for "mucked up". Mastering all the usages of "mucked up" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Unfortunately, LG has mucked up the experience with its proprietary LG UX 5.0+ skin.
The trouble is, Wells Fargo has mucked up mortgage lending and modification in the past.
Those goldfish grew, swam downstream, mucked up waters wherever they went and spawned like mad.
The trouble is, Wells Fargo has mucked up mortgage lending and modification in the past.
The constant pinball machine of time zones has also severely mucked up my already iffy sleep habits.
If simply one aspect of the game was mucked up, there are specialty coaches and coordinators to berate.
And FRB signals are so mucked up that astronomers are convinced they're coming from outside the Milky Way Galaxy.
"It's a shame; Emerson's incredibly well-run here, yet it's all mucked up by the trade war," he said.
In pop culture's mucked-up mythology, there are definitely three fates peering down at celebrities and determining their romantic destiny.
Throughout 2018 it felt increasingly icky to give Facebook more of myself, knowing how many times the service mucked up.
The particles even mucked up a lot of the equipment the astronauts were using, including cameras, radiators, buttons, and more.
It's almost always true that the more the characters on these shows try to alter events, the more mucked up things become.
Spain's legal system may be entirely mucked up, but at least their tabloids seem like they're getting well-oiled—with this kind of fodder.
I'll never forget my worst day of fourth grade: I got supremely butthurt over losing the spelling bee because I mucked up the word 'jaguar'.
Those measurements can get mucked up easily on Earth, which is a noisy place filled with lots of vibrations and movements that can throw off results.
By sending Cassini into Saturn's gaseous atmosphere, the scientists are making sure that those two pristine worlds don't get mucked up with Earth germs and space junk.
"So while the Fed is not driving completely blind, the windshield is mucked up," Ellen Zentner, chief U.S. economist at Morgan Stanley, told clients in an audio note.
And the people who were running the computer system — it was at Duke, I think — were yelling at me for doing this, because I mucked up the system.
I think that has shut down anyone who would have made a comment ... I hope they'd be thinking 'I've mucked up here' and hopefully they won't do it again.
Issa avoided getting mucked up by a Democratic opponent in his original district and — rather than defending it from flipping to the Democrats — simply surrendered it without a fight.
It could be that, by the time Labour gets into power, the current government has so mucked up the Brexit process that the pound has already taken a beating.
You need look no further than San Antonio's second-round series against the Rockets, when Simmons mucked up the offensive play of none other than MVP-candidate James Harden in Games 5 and 6.
A technical snafu had mucked up the system on Monday, leaving candidates to move on to New Hampshire without clarity on who fared well in a state that's traditionally shaped the contours of presidential races.
And at the same time in Britain, they're being very aggressive in approving self-driving cars and drones and all kinds of regulations that have been mucked up, a little slower, here in this country.
But again, you know, back to the message, does it frustrate you as the person who&aposs in charge of the message going forward when it gets mucked up with -- you know, all of this stuff about Jeff Sessions?
The description says the whole restoration took around 15 to 20 hours in total, but he cautions against trying it at home unless you're willing to break your Game Boy; he mail ordered his already mucked up straight from Japan.
But liking a tweet and realizing its 18 hours old, or being unable to figure out when news is breaking because my timeline is mucked up by retweeted content and suggested tweets, made Twitter more unpleasant than it needed to be.
Highlights include: How Lyft mucked up the rollout of Lyft Line, why the guy now running e-scooter-share company Bird left the company, and what dog hung out in Travis Kalanick's house as the ride-hail companies discussed a merger.
Events came in profusion, leaving us in confusion as to what mattered, what was the most worrisome, and what was rollickingly funny—such as the stumblebum "plumbers," the Nixon White House's otherwise menacing private goon squad who mucked up everything they did.
They make use of graphical motifs such as stripes, grids, zigzags and squiggles, and luxuriate in a palette of warm colors: a muffled lavender, a lemon-chiffon yellow and a cherry-blossom pink that all, at times, get mucked up with gray.
It would be a tragedy if that power and potential skips over the women who serve the lunches where the uncomfortable moments happen; who change the hotel sheets and wash the champagne flutes after the Weinsteins of the world have mucked up their lairs and moved on.
We discuss how economists mucked up the climate debate, why Andrew Yang is wrong on automation, what it would take to revitalize the economies of middle and rural America, the policy and politics of Medicare-for-all, what a Democratic president should pass first, and much more.
An interesting note is the orchid blossom: Originally the orchid was plucked from a plant and worn on Easter on its own, but in the 1920s, florists started adding ribbons, and by the late '30s and '40s, the single blossom got mucked up with pink tulle and glitter.
"It's hard to justify [ATF agents] getting mucked up focusing on people who are breaking the law but don't intend to then use that illegal gun in [violent] crime," said David Chipman, a former ATF agent who now works as a senior policy advisor at the Giffords Law Center.
Because the budgetary process has become so mucked up and irrational, lurching from one continuing resolution to the next with the possibility of the government shutting down or the U.S. careening through its debt limit, it's hard for the public to keep track of what's frequently a rushed and closed door dead of night process.
We discussed how economists mucked up the climate debate, the Obama administration's record on the financial crisis, whether Andrew Yang is wrong on automation, what it would take to revitalize the economies of middle and rural America, the policy and politics of Medicare-for-all, what a Democratic president should pass first, and much more.
On 9 May Wyatt was still despondent: "I am desperately worried about her. I feel that Mark has mucked up her chances of a quick, high-priced sale for her memoirs". Mark Thatcher openly talked of getting eight, ten or even twenty million for his mother's memoirs, which was more than Murdoch was willing to pay. In his dealing's with Murdoch's rival Robert Maxwell, Mark Thatcher apparently had a one million fee for himself.
Robert Nevel, a Chicago architect who attended the synagogue as a boy, told a reporter that the reuse of the bimah, a central platform from which the Torah is read, as the location of the cash register felt like a kind of "accidental symbolism", almost a "sardonic commentary" on the idea that Jews worship money, and that the design of the access ramp had "mucked up" the building's stone base, a distinguishing feature of early Chicago style architecture.
The agricultural aspect is totally mucked up and discontent is rife amongst all the staff. It is an unhappy place and is a cemetery to many an innocent and enthusiastic person'. With the assumption of Lloyd George's occupation of Bron-y-de, Tilden wrote that the 'centre of the political universe was moved from London'. Lloyd George's mistress, Frances Stevenson lived nearby in 'Avalon', overlooking the orchards of Bron-y-de, having previously occupied the 'Old Barn', a former farm building.
The King and Cardinal arrive to see Columbo off, and the King decrees that Columbo will marry the Duchess on the day of his return. Celinda and Valeria talk about how sad it is that Columbo is going off unmarried, and may die without an heir—they seem to volunteer for the duty of being his baby mama. As soon as she's alone, the Duchess says that she doesn’t plan to tempt or betray him, but to secure “the promise I first made to love and honour,” which is her contract to Alvarez. Alvarez comes in and they discuss their love and plans to be with each other, which are currently being mucked up by the Cardinal and Columbo.
The first book, Pete the Cat: I Love My White Shoes, is the story of a cat whose white shoes get mucked up by various substances he steps in, but "Pete never loses his cool." Written as a song, its refrain is "I love my white shoes", changing to "I love my red shoes", "I love my blue shoes", and "I love my brown shoes". Then he steps in a bucket of water and the colors wash off, and they became wet, but still never loses his cool, he just sings his song. The book was self-published in 2008 and sold 7,000 copies in 10 months before it was picked up by HarperCollins – alerted by a YouTube meme in which two little girls read the book – and distributed throughout the United States and Canada.

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