释义 |
muck I. \ˈmək\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English muk, perhaps from Old English -moc; akin to Old Norse myki dung — more at mucus 1. : soft moist farmyard manure especially when mixed with decomposing vegetable material and used as a fertilizer 2. obsolete : money 3. a. (1) : wet clinging slimy dirt or filth < spattered with muck from the pigpen > (2) : something (as defamatory remarks) that injures or tends to injure the reputation or standing of another < throwing as much muck as possible at her rivals > b. (1) chiefly dialect : rubbish, trash, junk (2) : idle remarks or observations : nonsense, guff < recall some muck about chucking someone out — Ernest Hemingway > < the usual muck of old-timers and loafers — S.E.White > 4. a. : an untidy or messy condition < was all in a muck of sweat > b. : a state of confusion, uncertainty, or disorganization : a fouled-up condition < has made such a muck of things — Agatha Christie > < we're all in a muck, and we're to do the best we can — Richard Llewellyn > 5. a. (1) : a dark usually black earth that is capable of absorbing much water, that is usually moist or wet so as to have a consistency like that of moist or wet loam or humus, that is marked by the presence of organic usually plant matter in an advanced state of decomposition and in a proportion of usually less than 50 percent, that is rich in nitrogen and relatively low in mineral content (as potash) and that is very fertile (2) : earth resembling such muck in wetness or sogginess : soft wet mud : mire < floundering through the wet black muck — Marjory S. Douglas > b. : something that is oozy, viscid, or sticky like such muck : goo, gunk < was given some kind of muck to use as a salve > c. : a heavy soggy, slushy, or slimy deposit or mass of sedimentation or some similar heavy wet mass : sludge < oily muck on the floor of a garage > < pushed through the muck of dirty snow and half-thawed ice > < muck at the bottom of the drainpipe > 6. : material removed in the process of excavating or mining: as a. : the total mass of material (as soft earth, hardpan, gravel, rock) so removed b. : ore or rock in a loose heap as first broken in the process of mining c. : the material removed by hydraulic mining II. verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English mukken, from muk, n. transitive verb 1. a. : to clean up; especially : to clear of manure or filth < an old pair of boots with rubber feet and felt tops that were used for mucking out the corrals and the pigpen — W.V.T.Clark > b. (1) : to clear of material (as soft earth, gravel, rock) in the process of excavating or mining < mucking an excavation > (2) : to dig out or otherwise remove (as soft earth, gravel, rock) in the process of excavating or mining < after each blast they mucked out the rock > 2. : to cover with manure or some other fertilizing muck < mucking the orchards each year > 3. a. : to dirty with or as if with muck : soil < you can't touch pitch and not be mucked — R.L.Stevenson > b. : to dirty by tracking or littering : make untidy or messy < mucked up the floor > 4. chiefly Britain a. : to make a mess of : botch, bungle < was afraid of mucking up the experiment > b. : to throw into a state of confusion or disorganization : foul up : snarl, tangle < acting mucks up childhood — Clemence Dane > < mucked up every plan > 5. chiefly Britain : to push around : shove < still mucking the salt about — Richard Llewellyn > < mucked about by the last war, by inflations and depressions — Time > intransitive verb 1. dialect England : to work energetically or slavishly : toil, drudge 2. chiefly Britain a. (1) : to move about aimlessly or idly : wander, loiter < the country was full of people mucking about the fields — A.J.Liebling > (2) : to waste time in trivial or altogether useless activities : dawdle, putter < mucking about in the affairs of other peoples — A.J.Nock > b. : to play around : mess around : fool, trifle < hadn't mucked around with boys since the time when she was little — Ruth Park > < mucking about with some sort of occultism — Ngaio Marsh > III. noun (-s) Etymology: alteration of amuck (initial vowel taken as indefinite article a) archaic : the act of running amok |