¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Muckiest
1. mucky [adj] - See also: mucky
Lexicographical Neighbors of Muckiest
Literary usage of Muckiest
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Minnesota Horticulturist by Minnesota State Horticultural Society (1885)
"They have cleared the land just as far as possible; but if you want to drain and
tile it, it is the heaviest, muckiest and worst kind of land for a person ..."
2. Annual Report of the Minnesota State Horticultural Society for the Year by Minnesota State Horticultural Society (1885)
"They have cleared the land just as far as possible; but if you want to drain and
tile it, it is the heaviest, muckiest and worst kind of land for a person ..."
3. Left in Charge by Clara Morris (1904)
"... with some men ter see if theirs war a good place ter settle in—right down in
the muckiest marsh of a place where frogs would have chilled; ..."
4. In the North Countree: Annals and Anecdotes of Horse, Hound and Herd by William Scarth Dixon (1900)
"... and crossing t' railway again teak us reet across t' deepest, t' strangest,
and t' muckiest country you ..."
5. A Lady's Walks in the South of France in 1863 by Mary Eyre (1865)
"As soon as I let him go he shook himself, whisked his tail in defiance, and
bounded off into the very muckiest part of the swamp, as much as to say, ..."
6. The Minnesota Horticulturist by Minnesota State Horticultural Society (1885)
"They have cleared the land just as far as possible; but if you want to drain and
tile it, it is the heaviest, muckiest and worst kind of land for a person ..."
7. Annual Report of the Minnesota State Horticultural Society for the Year by Minnesota State Horticultural Society (1885)
"They have cleared the land just as far as possible; but if you want to drain and
tile it, it is the heaviest, muckiest and worst kind of land for a person ..."
8. Left in Charge by Clara Morris (1904)
"... with some men ter see if theirs war a good place ter settle in—right down in
the muckiest marsh of a place where frogs would have chilled; ..."
9. In the North Countree: Annals and Anecdotes of Horse, Hound and Herd by William Scarth Dixon (1900)
"... and crossing t' railway again teak us reet across t' deepest, t' strangest,
and t' muckiest country you ..."
10. A Lady's Walks in the South of France in 1863 by Mary Eyre (1865)
"As soon as I let him go he shook himself, whisked his tail in defiance, and
bounded off into the very muckiest part of the swamp, as much as to say, ..."