muck
/mʌk/
verb
- To make something dirty or messy.
- Don't muck your new shoes in the puddle.
- He mucked his shirt while fixing the car.
- The kids mucked the kitchen floor with their muddy footprints.
- To remove manure or dirt from a stable or animal enclosure.
- She mucks the horse stalls every morning.
- He spent the afternoon mucking the goat shed.
- We need to muck out the barn before winter.
Antonyms
noun
- Wet, sticky dirt or mud; a messy or unpleasant substance.
- The farmer cleaned the muck out of the horse stable.
- My boots were caked with muck from the garden.
- After the rain, the path was covered in thick muck.
- Something that is very dirty or of very low quality; rubbish or filth.
- They threw all the old muck from the attic into the dumpster.
- I can't believe you're reading that muck — it's not even true.
- The tabloid newspaper was full of muck about celebrities.