Confusables Entry 17 / 1011 60-second read

Bemused vs. Amused

Puzzled and a little lost versus entertained and pleased.

The comparisoni

✗ Wrong

The clown’s pratfalls left the children bemused.

If they were laughing, they were AMUSED. BEMUSED means they were confused.

✓ Correct

The clown’s pratfalls left the children amused.

‘Amused’ is the warm, entertained reaction you almost always mean.

More examplesii

01

The cat bat at the toy, bemused.

The cat bat at the toy, amused.

The cat is entertained, not puzzled. AMUSED.

02

He amused, looking at the blank cheque in his hand.

He was bemused, looking at the blank cheque in his hand.

A blank cheque is confusing, not funny. BEMUSED.

The ruleiii

BEMUSED = puzzled. AMUSED = entertained.

Don’t let the shared ending fool you. BE- in BEMUSED behaves like BE- in BEWILDERED. If no one is confused, you want AMUSED.

Notesiv

Register

BEMUSED is standard in edited writing for ‘puzzled.’ The drift toward ‘mildly amused’ is widespread in speech; some dictionaries now list it as a secondary sense.

Watch for

If a sentence works with either ‘bewildered’ or ‘entertained’ substituted in, you’ve picked the right one. BEMUSED pairs with BEWILDERED; AMUSED pairs with ENTERTAINED.

Memory aidv

Remember it like this

The Mona Lisa’s faint smile is often called ‘enigmatic’ — that’s the BEMUSED face. Think of Leonardo’s sitter: not laughing, just quietly keeping her own counsel.

In the wildvi

Real-world-style usage — how this looks in a sentence people would actually write.

  • The detective, bemused by the impossible alibi, asked the suspect to repeat his story.
  • The children were amused by the puppet show; the adults were bemused by the plot.

Test yourselfvii

Which one is right?

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