What's the difference between quagmire and quandary?

Quagmire


Definition:

  • (n.) Soft, wet, miry land, which shakes or yields under the feet.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) All these looked likely to be achieved in the final days of the talks, and still may be – if the hosts can pull the talks out of the quagmire on Saturday.
  • (2) Episodic changes in cognition unrelated to epilepsy or syncope remain a quagmire.
  • (3) Aimless wandering in the quagmire of imaging techniques is very expensive and nonproductive.
  • (4) The funding quagmire extends to Pakistan itself, where the US cables detail sharp criticism of the government's ambivalence towards funding of militant groups that enjoy covert military support.
  • (5) A Both the United States and the UK have consistently ruled this out, and it seems highly unlikely at present that either would risk a return to a high-casualty military quagmire from which they have only just extricated themselves.
  • (6) In a speech in Manchester, Trevor Phillips, the head of the Commission for Racial Equality, will warn against the country "sleep-walking" into a "New Orleans-style" quagmire of "fully fledged ghettoes".
  • (7) The economic quagmire has provided the perfect breeding ground for general merchandise discounters, who have expanded aggressively – more than filling the void created by the collapse of Woolworths in 2008.
  • (8) When American politicians consider solutions to the threat posed by Isis, they tend to favor abstractions over policy detail because, although Americans want to do more to root out Isis, we’re afraid of getting involved in another quagmire in the Middle East.
  • (9) Economic sanctions have combined with falling oil prices to deal a serious blow to the Russian economy in recent months, leading many to suspect that Putin might be looking for a way out of the east Ukraine quagmire.
  • (10) And Brennan knows that any questions left unanswered will only drag the department further into a quagmire.
  • (11) The British government’s appetite for being sucked back into the kind of tortuous negotiations and legal quagmire that lay behind the release of Shaker Aamer is likely to be limited.
  • (12) He was accused of being more interested in party politics than a way out of the quagmire.
  • (13) Asked if he needed to make a pragmatic deal with Assad in the face of the greater Isis threat he said: "In the past, simply saying, 'My enemy's enemy is my friend' has led to all sorts of moral quagmires and difficulties.
  • (14) Still, the early agreement on forests has boosted confidence in the UN process at a time when the main strand of talks on a global deal appear stuck in an 80-page long quagmire of a text.
  • (15) It has only provoked an insatiable demand from the public for more "free" services, with the result that the system has become a quagmire of cost overruns and unfulfilled and unrealizable promises.
  • (16) The perils of both objectives – a bloody quagmire – are the sources of Obama’s hesitation in Syria.
  • (17) Moscow remains wary of the Afghan quagmire, with memories still fresh of the disastrous 1979-89 war that cost the lives of 15,000 Russian soldiers and uncounted Afghan civilians, and ultimately contributed to the collapse of the Soviet Union.
  • (18) The present debate on capital punishment cannot be detached from the “Kurdish question”, which is stuck in a quagmire.
  • (19) People have tried and tried for many years and it always seems to be a quagmire."
  • (20) deals with the quagmire that awaits people caught in the welfare system.

Quandary


Definition:

  • (n.) A state of difficulty or perplexity; doubt; uncertainty.
  • (v. t.) To bring into a state of uncertainty, perplexity, or difficulty.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He’s a great defender when he hits you but when you have guys like Matt Giteau who is light on his feet and can change direction …” And what of England, hosts of the tournament who, beset by selection quandaries, forgot the fundamentals against France last weekend.
  • (2) On occasions, they result in some diagnostic and therapeutic quandaries.
  • (3) 12.06pm BST Our own Dan Lucas was first to answer the refereeing quandary of the day, pointing out that Fifa's Law 17 says this: A goalkeeper who is injured while kicks are being taken from the penalty mark and is unable to continue as goalkeeper may be replaced by a named substitute provided his team has not used the maximum number of substitutes permitted under the competition rules.
  • (4) This, if anything, demonstrates the quandary and complexity of financial regulation.
  • (5) These two distinct paradigms lead to divergent treatment goals, which leaves the clinician in a quandary about how best to treat an individual who experiences a drinking problem.
  • (6) The quandary is a familiar one to every football fan who has watched his or her team score a goal while surrounded by rival supporters.
  • (7) "Egypt is in a quandary – it doesn't want to punish Gaza by closing the tunnels, but it needs to secure Sinai," said one western diplomat.
  • (8) The quandary of how to determine the value of human life and health is an essential problem but is certainly not straight forward.
  • (9) Some of the theoretical quandaries associated with the concept are briefly reviewed.
  • (10) Specific quandaries arise with involuntary hospitalization and treatment, and with evaluating patients for the courts.
  • (11) Since RecA protein lacks demonstrable helicase activity, the mechanism by which it pushes strand exchange through long heterologous inserts has been a quandary.
  • (12) This leaves Scotland's policymakers in something of a quandary: how can you tackle a problem when you don't know what is causing it?
  • (13) Practical solutions to the quandaries posed by the qualitative-quantitative dichotomy are explicated, with supporting methodological examples for nursing research studies.
  • (14) Such thirtysomething quandaries, of course, are found in greater-than-average concentration in Hollywood, where a good deal of the writers, directors and executives fall into this group; this is one reason why so many of these films have been produced.
  • (15) "The whole of the radio industry is in a bit of a quandary.
  • (16) This fixture has, in the Wenger era, been all about Arsenal's possession of the perfect answer to every quandary.
  • (17) One of the biggest quandaries among those who study radicalisation is identifying the point at which individuals move from "extremism" to "violent extremism".
  • (18) Knitting and sewing take place at its Los Angeles HQ, and it boasts an enviable benefits package for its workers (on the flipside, CEO Dov Charney has been dogged by accusations of alleged sexual harassment, which throws up its own ethical quandaries).
  • (19) And therein lies a quandary: how can a casual who must only say yes ever enter into a real and honest dialogue with the permanent staff who employ them?
  • (20) Underlying it all, there's not only rightful compassion for victims, but also perhaps relief that we don't have to face such quandaries.