[f. as prec. + -MENT.] The action of jumbling or fact of being jumbled; confused mixture.

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1706.  J. Hancock, in Boyle Lect. (1739), II. 210. Shall we think this noble frame … was made by a casual jumblement of atoms?

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1767.  H. Brooke, Fool of Qual. (1792), IV. xvii. 75. A jumblement of intention.

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1843.  Mrs. Carlyle, Lett., I. 271. Solitude has such a power of blending past, present, and future, far and near, all into one confused jumblement.

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