If you’ve ever felt your brain twisting itself into a pretzel while trying to follow a complicated or hard-to-follow line of reasoning, you’ll appreciate the relative simplicity of the adjective convoluted, which is perfect for describing head-scratchers (and pretzel-makers). Convoluted traces back to the Latin verb convolvere, meaning “to roll up, coil, or twist.” Originally, convoluted (like its predecessor in English, the verb convolute) was used in the context of things having literal convolutions—in other words, twisty things like intestines or a ram’s horns. Over time it expanded to figuratively describe things like arguments, plots, stories, logic, etc., that are intricate or feature many twists and turns that make them difficult to understand.
At base stands a profound respect for the integrity of history and the complex and convoluted relationship between present and the past.—Ira Berlin, New York Times Book Review, 9 Sept. 2001They are pictures of convoluted tree trunks on an island of pink wave-smoothed stone …—Margaret Atwood, Harper's, August 1990… she has been fashioning sequences of plans too convoluted to materialize …—Joseph Heller, God Knows, 1984To therapists, stepfamilies may present convoluted psychological dilemmas …—Letty Cottin Pogrebin, Family Politics, 1983
a convoluted explanation that left the listeners even more confused than they were before
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Many are skeptical that the fast-fashion shoe brand will be able to make such a big switch in entering the convoluted tech space.—Justin Klawans, TheWeek, 23 Apr. 2026 Not because of a convoluted plot or half-baked characters.—Jon Blistein, Rolling Stone, 23 Apr. 2026 The result, a convoluted polynomial in the variables x and y, has left other researchers scratching their heads.—Erica Klarreich, Quanta Magazine, 22 Apr. 2026 The Catholic Church in Equatorial Guinea also has a convoluted history with power in the country.—ABC News, 22 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for convoluted