Definition of Muggurs

1. muggur [n] - See also: muggur

Lexicographical Neighbors of Muggurs

mugget
muggier
muggiest
muggily
mugginess
mugginesses
mugging
muggings
muggins
mugginses
muggish
muggled
muggling
muggs
muggur
muggurs (current term)
muggy
mughal
mughals
mugham
mughams
mugho pine
mughouse
mughouses
mugil
mugiloid
mugless
mugo pine
mugs
mugs' games

Literary usage of Muggurs

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Forests of Upper India and Their Inhabitants by Thomas W. Webber (1902)
"In the sluggish deep waters of the tributaries of the Rapti and Gumti near Gorakhpur muggurs chiefly abound. In fact, even close to Gorakhpur there were a ..."

2. The Intellectual Observer (1867)
"Occasionally a child is carried away, I suppose when a dearth of visitors (and consequently kids) make the muggurs unusually voracious, ..."

3. Thirty Years of Shikar by Edward Braddon (1895)
"shooting at" muggurs, I did so advisedly, because shooting seems to convey the idea of bagging the creature shot, and this is by no means the ordinary ..."

4. A Staff Officer's Scrap-book During the Russo-Japanese War by Ian Hamilton (1905)
"The majority of the company, perhaps two-thirds of it, conformed to the type of the muggurs of Nepaul; squat and square: bullet-headed and pudding-faced. ..."

5. Journal of the Transactions of the Victoria Institute, Or Philosophical by Victoria Institute (Great Britain) (1907)
"... especially solitary animals, who have probably been turned out of the herd on account of their fighting propensities. Alligators (both muggurs and ..."

6. The Forests of Upper India and Their Inhabitants by Thomas W. Webber (1902)
"In the sluggish deep waters of the tributaries of the Rapti and Gumti near Gorakhpur muggurs chiefly abound. In fact, even close to Gorakhpur there were a ..."

7. The Intellectual Observer (1867)
"Occasionally a child is carried away, I suppose when a dearth of visitors (and consequently kids) make the muggurs unusually voracious, ..."

8. Thirty Years of Shikar by Edward Braddon (1895)
"shooting at" muggurs, I did so advisedly, because shooting seems to convey the idea of bagging the creature shot, and this is by no means the ordinary ..."

9. A Staff Officer's Scrap-book During the Russo-Japanese War by Ian Hamilton (1905)
"The majority of the company, perhaps two-thirds of it, conformed to the type of the muggurs of Nepaul; squat and square: bullet-headed and pudding-faced. ..."

10. Journal of the Transactions of the Victoria Institute, Or Philosophical by Victoria Institute (Great Britain) (1907)
"... especially solitary animals, who have probably been turned out of the herd on account of their fighting propensities. Alligators (both muggurs and ..."

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