1. mystified - Adjective
2. mystified - Verb
Derived from mystify
4. mystified - Adjective Satellite
of Mystify
Source: Webster's dictionaryShow me your flowcharts and conceal your tables, and I shall continue to be mystified. Show me your tables, and I won't usually need your flowcharts; they'll be obvious. Fred Brooks
It is important to see that, in the critique of ideology, only those interventions will work which make sense to the mystified subject itself. Terry Eagleton
The plot is so tired that even this reviewer, who in infancy was let drop by a nurse with the result that she has ever since been mystified by amateur coin tricks, was able to guess the identity of the murderer from the middle of the book. Dorothy Parker
I have been induced to adopt this course by a desire that my readers should be taught to think as well as to experiment, and thus be qualified at an early part of their study to discriminate between the true and the false, and acquire the facts of the science without being mystified by its fictions. John Joseph Griffin
I am mystified by my heterosexual affairs - but then I am mystified by most of my relationships. Rupert Everett
I am just mystified by these people telling me I would think Obama was doing a great job if his skin contained less melanin. Jonah Goldberg