1. mired - Noun
2. mired - Verb
4. mired - Adjective Satellite
of Mire
Source: Webster's dictionarythe difficulties in which the question is involved Source: Internet
brilliant leadership mired in details and confusion Source: Internet
A callow man spurns the tender love of an exceptional young woman, destroys his dearest male friend and is condemned to endure a solitary existence mired in regrets. Source: Internet
A former staffer in Sports Minister Bridget McKenzie’s office has revealed they raised concerns about the sport grants program that has now mired Ms McKenzie in scandal - and got shut down. Source: Internet
America has no domestic savings to absorb this debt, and foreigners will not lend such enormous sums to a country with a collapsing currency — especially a country mired in a Middle East war running up hundreds of billions of dollars in war debt. Source: Internet
By the end of the month, arrangements for Freud's own departure for London had become stalled, mired in a legally tortuous and financially extortionate process of negotiation with the Nazi authorities. Source: Internet