Search:mud -> MUD
mud
m u d hex:#109;#117;#100;
The Salt of the World?
- Mud - n. - Earth and water mixed so as to be soft and adhesive.
- Mud - v. t. - To bury in mud.
- Mud - v. t. - To make muddy or turbid.
- Mudar - n. - Either one of two asclepiadaceous shrubs (Calotropis gigantea, and C. procera), which furnish a strong and valuable fiber. The acrid milky juice is used medicinally.
- Mudarin - n. - A brown, amorphous, bitter substance having a strong emetic action, extracted from the root of the mudar.
- Muddied - imp. & p. p. - of Muddy
- Muddily - adv. - In a muddy manner; turbidly; without mixture; cloudily; obscurely; confusedly.
- Muddiness - n. - The condition or quality of being muddy; turbidness; foulness caused by mud, dirt, or sediment; as, the muddiness of a stream.
- Muddiness - n. - Obscurity or confusion, as in treatment of a subject; intellectual dullness.
- Muddle - v. t. - To make turbid, or muddy, as water.
- Muddle - v. t. - To cloud or stupefy; to render stupid with liquor; to intoxicate partially.
- Muddle - v. t. - To waste or misuse, as one does who is stupid or intoxicated.
- Muddle - v. t. - To mix confusedly; to confuse; to make a mess of; as, to muddle matters; also, to perplex; to mystify.
- Muddle - v. i. - To dabble in mud.
- Muddle - v. i. - To think and act in a confused, aimless way.
- Muddle - n. - A state of being turbid or confused; hence, intellectual cloudiness or dullness.
- Muddled - imp. & p. p. - of Muddle
- Muddlehead - n. - A stupid person.
- Muddler - n. - One who, or that which, muddles.
- Muddling - p. pr. & vb. n. - of Muddle
- Muddy - superl. - Abounding in mud; besmeared or dashed with mud; as, a muddy road or path; muddy boots.
- Muddy - superl. - Turbid with mud; as, muddy water.
- Muddy - superl. - Consisting of mud or earth; gross; impure.
- Muddy - superl. - Confused, as if turbid with mud; cloudy in mind; dull; stupid; also, immethodical; incoherent; vague.
- Muddy - superl. - Not clear or bright.
- Stepping-stone - n. - A stone to raise the feet above the surface of water or mud in walking.
- Illutation - n. - The act or operation of smearing the body with mud, especially with the sediment from mineral springs; a mud bath.
- Salse - n. - A mud volcano, the water of which is often impregnated with salts, whence the name.
- Sludger - n. - A bucket for removing mud from a bored hole; a sand pump.
- Splashboard - n. - A guard in the front part of vehicle, to prevent splashing by a mud or water from the horse's heels; -- in the United States commonly called dashboard.
- Slough - n. - A place of deep mud or mire; a hole full of mire.
- Bemire - v. t. - To drag through, encumber with, or fix in, the mire; to soil by passing through mud or dirt.
- Sifter - n. - Any lamellirostral bird, as a duck or goose; -- so called because it sifts or strains its food from the water and mud by means of the lamell/ of the beak.
- Scraper - n. - An instrument by which the soles of shoes are cleaned from mud and the like, by drawing them across it.
- Dauber - n. - The mud wasp; the mud dauber.
- Draggle - v. i. - To be dragged on the ground; to become wet or dirty by being dragged or trailed in the mud or wet grass.
- Trionyx - n. - A genus of fresh-water or river turtles which have the shell imperfectly developed and covered with a soft leathery skin. They are noted for their agility and rapacity. Called also soft tortoise, soft-shell tortoise, and mud turtle.
- Bashaw - n. - A very large siluroid fish (Leptops olivaris) of the Mississippi valley; -- also called goujon, mud cat, and yellow cat.
- Ooze - n. - Soft mud or slime; earth so wet as to flow gently, or easily yield to pressure.
- Sullage - n. - Silt; mud deposited by water.
- Quillwort - n. - Any plant or species of the genus Isoetes, cryptogamous plants with a cluster of elongated four-tubed rushlike leaves, rising from a corm, and containing spores in their enlarged and excavated bases. There are about seventeen American species, usually growing in the mud under still, shallow water. So called from the shape of the shape of the leaves.
- Bawn - n. - An inclosure with mud or stone walls, for keeping cattle; a fortified inclosure.
- Mire - v. t. - To soil with mud or foul matter.
- Bathybius - n. - A name given by Prof. Huxley to a gelatinous substance found in mud dredged from the Atlantic and preserved in alcohol. He supposed that it was free living protoplasm, covering a large part of the ocean bed. It is now known that the substance is of chemical, not of organic, origin.
- Mudfish - n. - The mud minnow.
- Scooper - n. - The avocet; -- so called because it scoops up the mud to obtain food.
- Dabble - v. i. - To play in water, as with the hands; to paddle or splash in mud or water.
- Slushy - a. - Abounding in slush; characterized by soft mud or half-melted snow; as, the streets are slushy; the snow is slushy.
- Fender - v. t. & i. - A screen to protect a carriage from mud thrown off the wheels: also, a splashboard.
- Squilla - n. - Any one of numerous stomapod crustaceans of the genus Squilla and allied genera. They make burrows in mud or beneath stones on the seashore. Called also mantis shrimp. See Illust. under Stomapoda.
strongscsv:description
- H5430 סְאוֹן - 5430 סְאוֹן - סְאוֹן - - çᵉʼôwn - seh-own' - from סָאַן; perhaps a military boot (as aprotection from mud; battle. - Noun Masculine - heb
- H2916 טִיט - 2916 טִיט - טִיט - - ṭîyṭ - teet - from an unused root meaning apparently to be sticky (rather perb. a demonstrative); from טוּא, through the idea of dirt to be swept away); mud or clay; figuratively, calamity; clay, dirt, mire. - Noun Masculine - heb
- H6083 עָפָר - 6083 עָפָר - עָפָר - - ʻâphâr - aw-fawr' - from עָפַר; dust (as powdered or gray); hence, clay, earth, mud; ashes, dust, earth, ground, morter, powder, rubbish. - Noun Masculine - heb
- H5918 עׇכְרָן - 5918 עׇכְרָן - עׇכְרָן - - ʻOkrân - ok-rawn' - from עָכַר; muddler; Okran, an Israelite; Ocran. - Proper Name Masculine - x-pn
- H444 אָלַח - 444 אָלַח - אָלַח - - ʼâlach - aw-lakh' - a primitive root; to muddle, i.e. (figuratively and intransitive) to turn (morally) corrupt; become filthy. - - heb
- G1004 βόρβορος - 1004 βόρβορος - ΒΌΡΒΟΡΟΣ - - bórboros - bor'-bor-os - of uncertain derivation; mud:--mire. - Noun Masculine - greek
- H1206 בֹץ - 1206 בֹץ - בֹץ - - bôts - botse - probably the same as בּוּץ; mud (as whitish clay); mire. - Noun Masculine - heb
- H4833 מִרְפָּשׂ - 4833 מִרְפָּשׂ - מִרְפָּשׂ - - mirpâs - meer-paws' - from רָפַשׂ; muddled water; that which...have fouled. - Noun Masculine - heb
- H4688 מְצוֹלָה - 4688 מְצוֹלָה - מְצוֹלָה - - mᵉtsôwlâh - mets-o-law' - or מְצֹלָה; also מְצוּלָה; or מְצֻלָה; from the same as צוּלָה; a deep place (of water or mud); bottom, deep, depth. - Noun Feminine - heb
- H7516 רֶפֶשׁ - 7516 רֶפֶשׁ - רֶפֶשׁ - - rephesh - reh'-fesh - from רָפַשׂ; mud (as roiled); mire. - Noun Masculine - heb
- H3121 יָוֵן - 3121 יָוֵן - יָוֵן - - yâvên - yaw-ven' - from the same as יַיִן; properly, dregs (as effervescing); hence, mud; mire, miry. - Noun Masculine - heb