Synonyms of the word muck


MUCKBEGRIME - BEMIRE - COLLY - DEJECTION - DIRTY - DROPPINGS - DUNG - FAECES - FECES - GOO - GOOK - GRIME - GUNK - MANURE - MATTER - MIRE - MUD - OOZE - ORDURE - REMOVE - SCATTER - SLIME - SLUDGE - SOIL - SPREAD - STOOL - SUBSTANCE - TAKE - WITHDRAW

muck

  • n. Slimy mud.
  • n. Soft or slimy manure.
  • n. dirt; something that makes another thing dirty.
  • n. Anything filthy or vile.
  • n. (obsolete, derogatory) money.
  • v. To shovel muck.
  • v. To manure with muck.
  • v. To do a dirty job.
  • v. (poker, colloquial) To pass, to fold without showing one's cards, often done when a better hand has already…

begrime

  • v. (transitive) To make something dirty; to soil.

bemire

  • v. To soil (or be soiled) with mud.

colly

  • adj. (Britain, dialect) black as coal.
  • v. (transitive, archaic) to make black, as with coal.
  • n. (Britain, dialect) Soot.
  • n. (Britain, dialect) A blackbird.
  • n. (dated) Alternative spelling of collie.

dejection

  • n. A state of melancholy or depression; low spirits, the blues.
  • n. The act of humbling or abasing oneself.
  • n. A low condition; weakness; inability.
  • n. (medicine, archaic) Defecation or feces.

dirty

  • adj. Unclean; covered with or containing unpleasant substances such as dirt or grime.
  • adj. That makes one unclean; corrupting, infecting.
  • adj. Morally unclean; obscene or indecent, especially sexually.
  • adj. Dishonourable; violating accepted standards or rules.
  • adj. Corrupt, illegal, or improper.
  • adj. Out of tune.
  • adj. Of color, discolored by impurities.
  • adj. (computing) Containing data which need to be written back to a larger memory.
  • adj. (slang) Carrying illegal drugs among one's possessions or inside of one's bloodstream.
  • adj. (informal) Used as an intensifier, especially in conjunction with "great".
  • adj. Sleety; gusty; stormy.
  • adv. In a dirty manner.
  • v. (transitive) To make (something) dirty.
  • v. (transitive) To stain or tarnish (somebody) with dishonor.
  • v. (transitive) To debase by distorting the real nature of (something).
  • v. (intransitive) To become soiled.

droppings

  • n. animal excrement.

dung

  • n. (uncountable) Manure; animal excrement.
  • n. (countable) A type of manure, as from a particular species or type of animal.
  • v. (transitive) To fertilize with dung.
  • v. (transitive, calico printing) To immerse or steep, as calico, in a bath of hot water containing cow dung,…
  • v. (intransitive) To void excrement.
  • v. (obsolete) past participle of ding.
  • v. (colloquial) To discard (especially rubbish); to chuck out.

faeces

  • n. British spelling standard spelling of feces.

feces

  • n. Digested waste material (typically solid or semi-solid) discharged from the bowels; excrement.

goo

  • n. (uncountable, informal) Any semi-solid or liquid substance; especially one that is sticky, gummy or slippery;…
  • n. Excessive, showy sentimentality.
  • v. (transitive) To apply goo to something.
  • n. An example of baby talk.
  • v. (intransitive) To produce baby talk.

gook

  • n. (slang, vulgar, pejorative, offensive, ethnic slur) A person of Far Eastern or Oceanian descent, especially…
  • n. (dated) A foreigner, especially an enemy soldier in wartime.
  • n. (informal) Grime or mud.

grime

  • n. Dirt, grease, soot, etc. that is ingrained and difficult to remove.
  • n. (music) A genre of urban music that emerged in London, England, in the early 2000s, primarily a development…
  • v. To begrime; to cake with dirt.

gunk

  • n. (uncountable, informal) dirt or grime; any vague or unknown substance.
  • n. (uncountable) A subculture of 21st century American males, combining elements of modern gothic culture…
  • n. (countable) A member of the gunk subculture.
  • v. To soil or make dirty.

manure

  • v. To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture.
  • v. To apply manure (as fertilizer or soil improver).
  • n. Animal excrement, especially that of common domestic farm animals and when used as fertilizer. Generally…
  • n. Any fertilizing substance, whether of animal origin or not.
  • n. (euphemistic) Rubbish; nonsense; bullshit.

matter

  • n. Substance, material.
  • n. A condition, subject or affair, especially one of concern.
  • n. An approximate amount or extent.
  • n. (obsolete) The essence; the pith; the embodiment.
  • n. (obsolete) Inducing cause or reason, especially of anything disagreeable or distressing.
  • n. (dated) Pus.
  • v. (intransitive) To be important.
  • v. (transitive, obsolete outside dialects) To care about, to mind; to find important.
  • v. To form pus or matter, as an abscess; to maturate.

mire

  • n. Deep mud; moist, spongy earth.
  • n. An undesirable situation, a predicament.
  • v. To weigh down.
  • v. To cause or permit to become stuck in mud; to plunge or fix in mud.
  • v. To soil with mud or foul matter.
  • n. (obsolete) An ant.

mud

  • n. A mixture of water and soil or fine grained sediment.
  • n. A plaster-like mixture used to texture or smooth drywall.
  • n. (construction industry slang) Wet concrete as it is being mixed, delivered and poured.
  • n. (figuratively) Willfully abusive, even slanderous remarks or claims, notably between political opponents.
  • n. (slang) Money, dough, especially when proceeding from dirty business.
  • n. (gay sex, slang) stool that is exposed as a result of anal sex.
  • n. (geology) A particle less than 62.5 microns in diameter, following the Wentworth scale.
  • n. (slang, derogatory, ethnic slur) A black person.
  • v. (transitive) To make muddy, dirty.
  • v. (transitive) To make turbid.
  • v. (intransitive, Internet) To participate in a MUD, or multi-user dungeon.

ooze

  • n. Potion of vegetable matter used for leather tanning.
  • n. Secretion, humour.
  • n. A thick often unpleasant liquid; muck.
  • n. A pelagic marine sediment containing a significant amount of the microscopic remains of either calcareous…
  • v. (intransitive) To be secreted or slowly leak.
  • v. (intransitive, figuratively) To give off a sense of (something).
  • n. Soft mud, slime, or shells on the bottom of a body of water.
  • n. A piece of soft, wet, pliable turf.
  • n. The liquor of a tanning vat.

ordure

  • n. Excrement; dung.

remove

  • v. (transitive) To move something from one place to another, especially to take away.
  • v. (transitive) To murder.
  • v. (cricket, transitive) To dismiss a batsman.
  • v. (transitive) To discard, set aside, especially something abstract (a thought, feeling, etc.).
  • v. (intransitive, now rare) To depart, leave.
  • v. (intransitive) To change one's residence; to move.
  • v. To dismiss or discharge from office.
  • n. The act of removing something.
  • n. (archaic) Removing a dish at a meal in order to replace it with the next course, a dish thus replaced,…
  • n. (Britain) (at some public schools) A division of the school, especially the form prior to last.
  • n. A step or gradation (as in the phrase "at one remove").
  • n. Distance in time or space; interval.
  • n. (dated) The transfer of one's home or business to another place; a move.
  • n. The act of resetting a horse's shoe.

scatter

  • v. (ergative) To (cause to) separate and go in different directions; to disperse.
  • v. (transitive) To distribute loosely as by sprinkling.
  • v. (transitive, physics) To deflect (radiation or particles).
  • v. (intransitive) To occur or fall at widely spaced intervals.
  • v. (transitive) To frustrate, disappoint, and overthrow.
  • v. (transitive) To be dispersed upon.

slime

  • n. Soft, moist earth or clay, having an adhesive quality; viscous mud; any substance of a dirty nature, that…
  • n. Any mucilaginous substance; or a mucus-like substance which exudes from the bodies of certain animals,…
  • n. (informal, derogatory) A sneaky, unethical person; a slimeball.
  • n. (figuratively, obsolete) Human flesh, seen disparagingly; mere human form.
  • n. (obsolete) = Jew’s slime (bitumen).
  • v. (transitive) To coat with slime.
  • v. (transitive, figuratively) To besmirch or disparage.

sludge

  • n. Solids separated from suspension in a liquid.
  • n. A residual semi-solid material left from industrial, water treatment, or wastewater treatment processes.
  • n. A sediment of accumulated minerals in a steam boiler.
  • n. A mass of small pieces of ice on the surface of a body of water.
  • n. (uncountable, music) sludge metal.
  • v. (intransitive, informal) to slump or slouch.
  • v. (intransitive) to slop or drip slowly.

soil

  • n. (uncountable) A mixture of sand and organic material, used to support plant growth.
  • n. (uncountable) The unconsolidated mineral or organic material on the immediate surface of the earth that…
  • n. (uncountable) The unconsolidated mineral or organic matter on the surface of the earth that has been subjected…
  • n. Country or territory.
  • n. That which soils or pollutes; a stain.
  • n. A marshy or miry place to which a hunted boar resorts for refuge; hence, a wet place, stream, or tract…
  • n. Dung; compost; manure.
  • v. (transitive) To make dirty.
  • v. (intransitive) To become dirty or soiled.
  • v. (transitive, figuratively) To stain or mar, as with infamy or disgrace; to tarnish; to sully.
  • v. (reflexive) To dirty one's clothing by accidentally defecating while clothed.
  • v. To make invalid, to ruin.
  • v. To enrich with soil or muck; to manure.
  • n. (uncountable, euphemistic) Faeces or urine etc. when found on clothes.
  • n. (countable, medicine) A bag containing soiled items.
  • n. A wet or marshy place in which a boar or other such game seeks refuge when hunted.
  • v. To feed, as cattle or horses, in the barn or an enclosure, with fresh grass or green food cut for them,…

spread

  • v. (transitive) To stretch out, open out (a material etc.) so that it more fully covers a given area of space.
  • v. (transitive) To extend (individual rays, limbs etc.); to stretch out in varying or opposing directions.
  • v. (transitive) To disperse, to scatter or distribute over a given area.
  • v. (intransitive) To proliferate; to become more widely present, to be disseminated.
  • v. (transitive) To disseminate; to cause to proliferate, to make (something) widely known or present.
  • v. (intransitive) To take up a larger area or space; to expand, be extended.
  • v. (transitive) To smear, to distribute in a thin layer.
  • v. (transitive) To cover (something) with a thin layer of some substance, as of butter.
  • v. To prepare; to set and furnish with provisions.
  • v. (intransitive, slang) To open one’s legs, especially for sexual favours.
  • n. The act of spreading.
  • n. Something that has been spread.
  • n. An expanse of land.
  • n. A large tract of land used to raise livestock; a cattle ranch.
  • n. A piece of material used as a cover (such as a bedspread).
  • n. A large meal, especially one laid out on a table.
  • n. (bread, etc.) Any form of food designed to be spread such as butters or jams.
  • n. An item in a newspaper or magazine that occupies more than one column or page.
  • n. Two facing pages in a book, newspaper etc.
  • n. A numerical difference.
  • n. (business, economics) The difference between the wholesale and retail prices.
  • n. (trading, economics, finance) The difference between the price of a futures month and the price of another…
  • n. (trading, finance) The purchase of a futures contract of one delivery month against the sale of another…
  • n. (trading, finance) The purchase of one delivery month of one commodity against the sale of that same delivery…
  • n. (trading) An arbitrage transaction of the same commodity in two markets, executed to take advantage of…
  • n. (trading) The difference between bidding and asking price.
  • n. (finance) The difference between the prices of two similar items.
  • n. (geometry) An unlimited expanse of discontinuous points.
  • n. The surface in proportion to the depth of a cut gemstone.

stool

  • n. A seat for one person without a back or armrest, particularly.
  • n. (chiefly medicine) Feces, excrement.
  • n. (chiefly medicine) A production of feces or excrement, an act of defecation, stooling: a shit.
  • n. (archaic) A decoy.
  • n. (nautical) A small channel on the side of a vessel, for the deadeyes of the backstays.
  • n. (US, dialect) Material, such as oyster shells, spread on the sea bottom for oyster spat to adhere to.
  • v. (chiefly medicine) To produce stool, to defecate.
  • v. (horticulture) To cut down (a plant) until its main stem is close to the ground, resembling a stool, to…
  • n. A plant from which layers are propagated by bending its branches into the soil.
  • v. (agriculture) To ramify; to tiller, as grain; to shoot out suckers.

substance

  • n. Physical matter; material.
  • n. The essential part of anything; the most vital part.
  • n. Substantiality; solidity; firmness.
  • n. Material possessions; estate; property; resources.
  • n. A form of matter that has constant chemical composition and characteristic properties.
  • n. Drugs (illegal narcotics).
  • n. (theology) Hypostasis.

take

  • v. (transitive) To get into one's hands, possession, or control, with or without force.
  • v. (transitive) To receive or accept (something) (especially something given or bestowed, awarded, etc).
  • v. (transitive) To remove.
  • v. (transitive) To have sex with.
  • v. (transitive) To defeat (someone or something) in a fight.
  • v. (transitive) To grasp or grip.
  • v. (transitive) To select or choose; to pick.
  • v. (transitive) To adopt (select) as one's own.
  • v. (transitive) To carry or lead (something or someone).
  • v. (transitive) To use as a means of transportation.
  • v. (obsolete) To visit; to include in a course of travel.
  • v. (transitive) To obtain for use by payment or lease.
  • v. (transitive) To consume.
  • v. (transitive) To experience, undergo, or endure.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to change to a specified state or condition.
  • v. (transitive) To regard in a specified way.
  • v. (transitive) To conclude or form (a decision or an opinion) in the mind.
  • v. (transitive) To understand (especially in a specified way).
  • v. (transitive) To accept or be given (rightly or wrongly); assume (especially as if by right).
  • v. (transitive) To believe, to accept the statements of.
  • v. (transitive) To assume or suppose; to reckon; to regard or consider.
  • v. (transitive) To draw, derive, or deduce (a meaning from something).
  • v. (transitive) To derive (as a title); to obtain from a source.
  • v. (transitive) To catch or contract (an illness, etc).
  • v. (transitive) To come upon or catch (in a particular state or situation).
  • v. (transitive) To captivate or charm; to gain or secure the interest or affection of.
  • v. (transitive, of cloth, paper, etc) To absorb or be impregnated by (dye, ink, etc); to be susceptible to…
  • v. (transitive, of a ship) To let in (water).
  • v. (transitive) To require.
  • v. (transitive) To proceed to fill.
  • v. (transitive) To fill, to use up (time or space).
  • v. (transitive) To avail oneself of.
  • v. (transitive) To perform, to do.
  • v. (transitive) To assume or perform (a form or role).
  • v. (transitive) To bind oneself by.
  • v. (transitive) To move into.
  • v. (transitive) To go into, through, or along.
  • v. (transitive) To have or take recourse to.
  • v. (transitive) To ascertain or determine by measurement, examination or inquiry.
  • v. (transitive) To write down; to get in, or as if in, writing.
  • v. (transitive) To make (a photograph, film, or other reproduction of something).
  • v. (transitive, dated) To take a picture, photograph, etc of (a person, scene, etc).
  • v. (transitive) To obtain money from, especially by swindling.
  • v. (transitive, now chiefly by enrolling in a class or course) To apply oneself to the study of.
  • v. (transitive) To deal with.
  • v. (transitive) To consider in a particular way, or to consider as an example.
  • v. (transitive, baseball) To decline to swing at (a pitched ball); to refrain from hitting at, and allow…
  • v. (transitive, grammar) To have an be used with (a certain grammatical form, etc).
  • v. (intransitive) To get or accept (something) into one's possession.
  • v. (intransitive) To engage, take hold or have effect.
  • v. (intransitive) To become; to be affected in a specified way.
  • v. (intransitive, possibly dated) To be able to be accurately or beautifully photographed.
  • v. (intransitive, dialectal, proscribed) An intensifier.
  • v. (transitive, obsolete) To deliver, give (something) to (someone).
  • v. (transitive, obsolete outside dialects and slang) To give or deliver (a blow, to someone); to strike or…
  • n. The or an act of taking.
  • n. Something that is taken; a haul.
  • n. An interpretation or view, opinion or assessment; perspective.
  • n. An approach, a (distinct) treatment.
  • n. (film) A scene recorded (filmed) at one time, without an interruption or break; a recording of such a…
  • n. (music) A recording of a musical performance made during an uninterrupted single recording period.
  • n. A visible (facial) response to something, especially something unexpected; a facial gesture in response…
  • n. (medicine) An instance of successful inoculation/vaccination.
  • n. (rugby, cricket) A catch of the ball (in cricket, especially one by the wicket-keeper).
  • n. (printing) The quantity of copy given to a compositor at one time.

withdraw

  • v. (transitive) To pull (something) back, aside, or away.
  • v. (transitive) To take back (a comment, etc).
  • v. (transitive) To remove, to stop providing (one's support, etc).
  • v. (transitive) To extract (money from an account).
  • v. (intransitive) To retreat.
  • v. (intransitive) To be in withdrawal from an addictive drug etc.

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