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Word Meanings - MUCKY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

1. Filthy with muck; miry; as, a mucky road. "Mucky filth." Spenser. 2. Vile, in a moral sense; sordid. Spenser. Mucky money and false felicity. Latimer.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of MUCKY)

Related words: (words related to MUCKY)

  • SQUALIDLY
    In a squalid manner.
  • UNCLEAN
    1. Not clean; foul; dirty; filthy. 2. Ceremonially impure; needing ritual cleansing. He that toucheth the dead body of any man shall be unclean seven days. Num. xix. 11. 3. Morally impure. "Adultery of the heart, consisting of inordinate
  • SQUALIDNESS
    Quality or state of being squalid.
  • SQUALIDITY
    The quality or state of being squalid; foulness; filthiness.
  • MUCKY
    1. Filthy with muck; miry; as, a mucky road. "Mucky filth." Spenser. 2. Vile, in a moral sense; sordid. Spenser. Mucky money and false felicity. Latimer.
  • SQUALID
    Dirty through neglect; foul; filthy; extremely dirty. Uncomed his locks, and squalid his attrie. Dryden. Those squalid dens, which are the reproach of large capitals. Macaulay.
  • DIRTY
    1. Defiled with dirt; foul; nasty; filthy; not clean or pure; serving to defile; as, dirty hands; dirty water; a dirty white. Spenser. 2. Sullied; clouded; -- applied to color. Locke. 3. Sordid; base; groveling; as, a dirty fellow. The creature's
  • NASTY
    1. Offensively filthy; very dirty, foul, or defiled; disgusting; nauseous. 2. Hence, loosely: Offensive; disagreeable; unpropitious; wet; drizzling; as, a nasty rain, day, sky. 3. Characterized by obcenity; indecent; indelicate; gross; filthy.
  • UNCLEANSABLE
    Incapable of being cleansed or cleaned.
  • FILTHY
    Defiled with filth, whether material or moral; nasty; dirty; polluted; foul; impure; obscene. "In the filthy-mantled pool." Shak. He which is filthy let him be filthy still. Rev. xxii. 11. Syn. -- Nasty; foul; dirty; squalid; unclean; sluttish;
  • PHOTO-EPINASTY
    A disproportionately rapid growth of the upper surface of dorsiventral organs, such as leaves, through the stimulus of exposure to light. Encyc. Brit.
  • HYPONASTY
    Downward convexity, or convexity of the inferior surface.
  • DYNASTY
    1. Sovereignty; lordship; dominion. Johnson. 2. A race or succession of kings, of the same line or family; the continued lordship of a race of rulers.

 

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