in a great confusion
not giving attention to something
being in a state of perplexity or confusion
unable to think or understand clearly about what is happening around you
not alert
Jane always seems to be in a fog.
I always feel like I’m in a fog when I take that medication. It’s like it’s hard for me to think.
After the accident, he went about in a fog, even though he had not been injured.
History is a subject which I hate to study. So whenever I sit in history class, I am in a fog.
I didn’t vote for Alice because she always seems to be in a fog.
I was so upset for two days that I went around in a haze, not even answering when people spoke to me. (Here in this example, “haze” is used instead of “fog” which explicitly means to be in a confused state).
Millie always seems to be in a haze; she never knows what’s going on.
There is no origin for this idiom
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definition
Common phrase that has a specific meaning.