0 to make someone confused about where they are and where they are going
1 to make people confused about where they are and where they are going:
Patients have difficulty negotiating the environment, become lost in their surroundings, and spatially disoriented even within their own home.
Rather than disorienting us, such work potentially creates a clearer sense of place and belonging for both composer and listener.
Victorian reviewers, somewhat disoriented, offered a variety of explanations for these apparent technical lapses.
These passages of pastiche are interleaved with the more severe, serial music, creating abrupt and disorienting stylistic juxtapositions.
For most royalists such a settlement promised only a limp, powerless church and a disorienting religious pluralism.
These included : light-headedness, feeling ' spacey ' or disoriented (n=5), puffy face, slight swelling in the throat, increased blood pressure, and ' queasy ' stomach.
Separated from family and village, people are quickly disoriented.
The more isolated and miniscule these discussions of visions become, the more powerful and disorienting the revelations.