ppl. a. [f. JUMBLE v. + -ED1.] Mixed up in disorder, confused, muddled up, etc.: see the verb. (In quot. 1611, Strummed.)
1611. Coryats Crudities, Panegyr. Verses. Like to the Iacks of iumbled virginall.
1689. Prior, Ep. to F. Shepherd, 73. That jumbled words, if Fortune throw em, Shall well as Dryden form a poem.
1739. Cibber, Apol. (1756), II. 119. These jumbled ideas had some shadow of meaning.
1859. Tennyson, Vivien, 345. The jumbled rubbish of a dream.