mucky


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Synonyms for mucky

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

Synonyms for mucky

of, relating to, or covered with slime

The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Synonyms for mucky

dirty and messy

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Mrs Couch, who owns two branches of Mucky Paws in Cardiff and Chepstow, and Wales' first Doggy Deli and Barkery in Cardiff, recently appeared on Britain's Flashiest Families on Channel 5 due to her obsession with spoiling her Maltese terrier Lucy, 14.
ego, in both its damaged, mucky form and its bandaged, glittery form, is what blocks our access to self-esteem -- to heart, to truth, to connection, to intimacy, to love -- every time.
Hosted by Mucky Mountains Morris group, based in St Helens, the annual event has come to Liverpool as part of the Capital of Culture celebrations.
The girl who strips off for lads' mags and wrote a mucky book about sexual fantasies now has the nerve to talk about her moral code.
This glues the soil together in a mucky mess, which gives players quite a workout.
[Q:] You are playing golf, and your partner lashes a terrific eight-iron shot from about 100 yards out in mucky conditions, the shot of her life, and her ball just catches the fringe above the hole, and what appears to be a gust of wind nudges it just at the crucial second, and the ball heads straight for the hole, and is at most, like, 10 inches away, on a true line, as far as you can tell.
The Liberals have another ace up their mucky sleeves: legalize euthanasia and assisted suicide.
We are almost daily challenged by the mucky world of electoral politics--by coalition building with groups that have very little in common aside from their desire to oust Bush, by a marginal presence in many areas and negligible resources almost everywhere and by the overwhelming challenge of learning (in little less than a year) the terminology, players and processes of a power ring we never before fought in.
In the foreground, two trembling flowers, a terrified glass eyeball in the center of each, are about to be snipped by garden shears; visible through a window behind them is a barren expanse of tree stumps and mucky sky.
Researchers have since speculated that this group, unearthed in a shallow channel and dubbed the First Family by its discoverers, either drowned during a flood or died after sinking into a mucky pit.
Out of the darkness: Miners at the end of their shift may think coal is a mucky business, but at least their pension funds are set to be invested in companies with a clean environmental record.
Just below that mucky bottom lies sordid pollutants.
Anyone who has travelled on the British railway system in the last few years will have noticed the way in which the authorities now refer to the people who are (usually) suffering from lateness, filth, surly employees, and a generally distasteful and mucky experience as 'customers' rather than 'passengers'.(1) The new lingo emphasises the relationship of the provider of' transport to the poor folk in the trains.