Lexicographical Neighbors of Mulsh
Literary usage of Mulsh
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mary's Garden and how it Grew by Frances Duncan (1904)
""mulsh is a covering," she said. "Sometimes when it is very hot, Eleanor, I have
just a sheet over me at night; sometimes a blanket, ..."
2. A new dictionary of the English language by Charles Richardson (1839)
"To mulsh the roots of trees, is to lay about them straw or other litter, softened
or saturated with liquid ; also—to soften or saturate the earth itself. ..."
3. Publications by English Dialect Society (1886)
"mulsh, s. long litter, put round plants and delicate trees and shrubs, to keep
the frost out. L. Scarcely local. ..."
4. A Glossary of Words Used in the County of Chester by Robert Holland (1886)
"mulsh, s. long litter, put round plants and delicate trees and shrubs, to keep
the frost out. L. Scarcely local. ..."
5. A Glossary of Words Used in the Dialect of Cheshire by Egerton Leigh (1877)
"L. mulsh, s.—Long litter, put round plants and delicate trees and shrubs, to keep
the frost out. L. MUN, s.—The mouth. Sued. ///////. w. MUN, v. ..."
6. Dictionary of Hard Words by Robert Morris Pierce (1910)
"... (also, and in Britain normally) mAi$. mulch v. cover with mulch or half-rotten
straw [synony- mous cognate mulsh; past participle and preterit mulched, ..."
7. Mary's Garden and how it Grew by Frances Duncan (1904)
""mulsh is a covering," she said. "Sometimes when it is very hot, Eleanor, I have
just a sheet over me at night; sometimes a blanket, ..."
8. A new dictionary of the English language by Charles Richardson (1839)
"To mulsh the roots of trees, is to lay about them straw or other litter, softened
or saturated with liquid ; also—to soften or saturate the earth itself. ..."
9. Publications by English Dialect Society (1886)
"mulsh, s. long litter, put round plants and delicate trees and shrubs, to keep
the frost out. L. Scarcely local. ..."
10. A Glossary of Words Used in the County of Chester by Robert Holland (1886)
"mulsh, s. long litter, put round plants and delicate trees and shrubs, to keep
the frost out. L. Scarcely local. ..."
11. A Glossary of Words Used in the Dialect of Cheshire by Egerton Leigh (1877)
"L. mulsh, s.—Long litter, put round plants and delicate trees and shrubs, to keep
the frost out. L. MUN, s.—The mouth. Sued. ///////. w. MUN, v. ..."
12. Dictionary of Hard Words by Robert Morris Pierce (1910)
"... (also, and in Britain normally) mAi$. mulch v. cover with mulch or half-rotten
straw [synony- mous cognate mulsh; past participle and preterit mulched, ..."