Convoluted Sentence Examples

convoluted
  • Dean silently hoped the call wasn't some convoluted effort to restore their relationship, which to his mind was thankfully finished.

    87
    66
  • The route was so convoluted that a cable was laid for people to follow.

    27
    16
  • This is getting too convoluted for a simple lad like me.

    17
    12
  • His reasons were, in his own words ' very convoluted ' .

    14
    10
  • Outline At first this sounds like a slightly convoluted system.

    12
    11
  • I must now turn to the rather convoluted provisions of the contract and consider the rival contentions of the parties.

    3
    4
  • This was not intended - the story why is a bit convoluted.

    5
    6
  • The language and idea space of the field have become so convoluted that they have confused even themselves.

    4
    4
  • This can lead to conversations which seem amazingly convoluted to the uninitiated.

    4
    4
  • There's no point drafting convoluted legalese to be sure of precision if people then ca n't disentangle the meaning.

    2
    3
    Advertisement
  • As the world's first hyper-twister coaster - named for its impressive height and convoluted track layout - Raging Bull is not for everyone.

    2
    3
  • Rex Brady's origins and story on Days of Our Lives traveled a convoluted path.

    1
    2
  • The cerebral hemispheres in existing Ungulates are well convoluted.

    3
    5
  • They consist of a pair of tubules with an intracellular lumen running up the sides of the body, at times merely sinuous, at others considerably convoluted.

    3
    5
  • There is a more or less convoluted tube with glandular walls connected internally with a closed " endsac " and opening to the exterior by means of a thin-walled duct.

    15
    17
    Advertisement
  • The method by which an employe is made liable for his own act of discrimination is somewhat convoluted.

    2
    4
  • Scanner 8 tracks here, all of which are intriguing & rather convoluted webs of sound.

    2
    4
  • Perhaps the plot was too convoluted for Butcher to keep track of all the seeds he was planting?

    2
    4
  • The full details are provided with the patch and are easy to follow if a little convoluted.

    3
    5
  • The only real quibble is the somewhat convoluted dealing tariff.

    2
    4
    Advertisement
  • This rather convoluted process is largely required in order to maintain the security of the local computer system.

    3
    5
  • Due to Metro Railroad construction this is now CLOSED with a very convoluted diversion only partly signed via back streets.

    2
    4
  • The argument, however, becomes convoluted regarding the significance of language to the execution of plans.

    2
    4
  • We present the sometimes gruesome facts of this murky, convoluted international legal quagmire.

    1
    3
  • There's no point drafting convoluted legalese to be sure of precision if people then can't disentangle the meaning.

    1
    3
    Advertisement
  • The next portion of the tubule is the loop of Henle, which leads to the distal convoluted tubule.

    1
    3
  • Covering a four hundred year period up to the present, Fuess meticulously charts divorce 's convoluted evolutionary trajectory.

    1
    3
  • These drugs act by increasing sodium excretion in the proximal convoluted tubule of the nephron (8).

    1
    3
  • Therefore, defining and understand perfume fragrances is a convoluted task.

    1
    3
  • The concept of "alternative clothing" can be a bit convoluted, but it generally applies to clothing items that exist outside the realm of high fashion, popular fashion and conservative fashion.

    1
    3
  • Many times these games lack characters and present a convoluted story that the user must decipher on his or her own.

    1
    3
  • The history traces a convoluted trail through the streets of L.A. and New York City where inner-city youth found in dance an alternative to violence, all the way to the current day when dance studios offer classes for child hip hop dancers.

    1
    3
  • The epididymis is a convoluted, tubelike structure that sits on the edge of the testicle.

    1
    3
  • Colon convoluted.

    2
    5
  • A long convoluted sentence often reveals a convoluted sentence often reveals a convoluted train of thought.

    3
    6
  • The segment that drains glomerular filtrate from the Bowman's capsule is the proximal convoluted tubule.

    1
    4
  • In syntax, the language plays off paratactic simplicity against complex, and sometimes convoluted, hypotaxis.

    1
    4
  • It has been shown that convoluted elements offer a substantial reduction in band gap frequency of 42% for a given lattice periodicity.

    2
    5
  • Covering a four hundred year period up to the present, Fuess meticulously charts divorce's convoluted evolutionary trajectory.

    1
    4
  • The genealogies, charts, maps, languages, and deliberately convoluted historical notes do not exist in order to lend verisimilitude to Middle-earth.

    1
    4
  • If you were turned off by Sons of Liberty's convoluted storyline and lack of Snake, have no worries about this one.

    2
    5
  • Each cansists of an eversible hollow tentacle provided with hooklets and capable of introversion within a mem The excretory organs consist of flame-cells, richly convoluted canaliculi, and a pair of longitudinal canals leading to the exterior by one or more pores.

    15
    19
  • While he possessed knowledge of a brutal attack, if the victim, Lydia, allowed it to happen as she said, wasn't she culpable in some convoluted way for the results of her entrapment?

    3
    7
  • In these cases the larva, called Tornaria, is pelagic and transparent, and possesses a complicated ciliated seam, the longitudinal ciliated band, often drawn out into convoluted bays and lappets.

    1
    5
  • Comparison of the brains of vertebrate animals (see Brain) brings into view the immense difference between the small, smooth brain of a fish or bird and the large and convoluted organ in man.

    1
    5
  • As so great a part of the whole surface of the kidney lies adjacent to external surfaces of the body, the remaining part which faces the internal organs is small; it consists of the left part of the under surface; it is level with the floor of the pericardium, and lies over the globular mass formed by the liver and convoluted intestine.

    20
    26
  • The oviducts are long, usually more or less convoluted tubes which open posteriorly into the cloaca, while their anterior aperture is situated far forward, sometimes close to the root of the lung; their walls secrete a gelatinous substance which invests the ova as they descend.

    14
    22
  • Owing to more or less herbivorous habits, the intestine is exceedingly elongate and much convoluted, being several times larger and of a greater calibre than after the metamorphosis.

    17
    26
  • The peripheral paren chyma gives rise to protonephridia, that is to coiled tubes commencing in pyriform cells containing a flame-like bundle of cilia and provided with branched outgrowths, and communicating with the exterior by long convoluted canals which open at the surface of the body.

    8
    18
  • They are ridges of aeolian limestone plastered over by a thin layer of corals and other calcareous organisms. The very remarkable "serpuline atolls" are covered by a solid crust made of the convoluted tubes of serpulae and Vermetus, together with barnacles, mussels, nullipores, corallines and some true incrusting corals.

    14
    25
  • The discovery of their true nature was made by Dr William Buckland, who observed that certain convoluted bodies occurring in the Lias of Gloucestershire had the form which would have been produced by their passage in the soft state through the intestines of reptiles or fishes.

    8
    20
  • There, as above explained, Leach began the subdivision of Muller's too comprehensive genus, the result being that Lynceus belongs to the Phyllopoda, and Chydorus (Leach, 1816) properly gives its name to the present family, in which the doubly convoluted intestine is so remarkable.

    18
    32