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  1. Dictionary
    muck
    /mʌk/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. spread manure on (land): "half the farm is mucked every year"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Muck is a noun that means mud, dirt, or a sticky natural substance such as animal waste. It can also mean something very unpleasant or low quality. Learn more about its usage, idioms and translations.

  3. Muck can be a noun or a verb, and it has different meanings related to dirt, filth, soil, or nonsense. Learn the synonyms, examples, history, and phrases of muck from Merriam-Webster.

  4. Muck is a noun that means mud, dirt, or a sticky natural substance such as animal waste. It can also mean something very unpleasant or low quality. Learn how to use muck in sentences and see translations in different languages.

  5. Muck is a goopy, muddy substance, like the muck at the bottom of a pond or the muck you clean out of the gutters on your house once a year. You can also use muck to mean animal manure, its original, 13th-century meaning — specifically, "cow dung and vegetable matter used as manure."

  6. Muck is a noun that means moist sticky mixture, especially of mud and filth, or a verb that means to make dirty or ruin something. Learn more about the origin, usage, and synonyms of muck from various dictionaries and sources.

  7. a highly organic, dark or black soil, less than 50 percent combustible, often used as a manure. mire; mud. filth, dirt, or slime. defamatory or sullying remarks. a state of chaos or confusion: to make a muck of things. Chiefly British Informal. something of no value; trash.

  8. Muck is a word that can mean dirt, animal faeces, or something of bad quality. It can also be used as a verb to describe actions of spreading, soiling, or ruining something.