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    maze
    /meɪz/

    noun

    • 1. a network of paths and hedges designed as a puzzle through which one has to find a way: "the house has a maze and a walled Italian garden"

    verb

    • 1. be dazed and confused: archaic, dialect "she was still mazed with the drug she had taken"

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  3. 1. a. : a confusing intricate network of passages. b. : something confusingly elaborate or complicated. a maze of regulations. 2. chiefly dialectal : a state of bewilderment. mazelike.

  4. a complicated set of rules, ideas, or subjects that you find difficult to deal with or understand: It's almost impossible to get through the maze of bureaucracy.

  5. noun. a confusing network of intercommunicating paths or passages; labyrinth. any complex system or arrangement that causes bewilderment, confusion, or perplexity: Her petition was lost in a maze of bureaucratic red tape. a state of bewilderment or confusion. a winding movement, as in dancing.

  6. a complicated set of rules, ideas, or subjects that you find difficult to deal with or understand: It's almost impossible to get through the maze of bureaucracy.

  7. A maze is a puzzle with twists and turns, where you try to find a path from the entrance to the exit without hitting dead ends. You can walk through a maze, or let your pencil do the walking.

  8. A maze is a complex system of passages or paths between walls or hedges and is designed to confuse people who try to find their way through it, often as a form of amusement. The palace has extensive gardens, a maze, and tennis courts.

  9. a complicated network of paths and passages. The building is a maze of corridors. The old city is a delightful maze for the modern tourist. I followed him through a maze of narrow alleys. [usually singular] a large number of complicated rules or details that are difficult to understand.

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