muddy 的 3 个定义
mud·di·er, mud·di·est.
- abounding in or covered with mud.
- not clear or pure: muddy colors.
- cloudy with sediment: muddy coffee.
- (7)
mud·died, mud·dy·ing.
- to make muddy; soil with mud.
- to make turbid.
- to cause to be confused or obscure.
mud·died, mud·dy·ing.
- to become muddy.
muddy 近义词
dark and cloudy
更多muddy例句
- April is often windy and muddy in Maine, but May and June are lambs.
- Frequent words like these can quickly muddy the phonics waters.
- Hearing devices are ever more capable of isolating specific sounds from a muddy cacophony of noises.
- Water managers around the state say they’ve seen striking increases in muddy water, after logging operations.
- Still, not knowing exactly who heard what — with none of the sources on the record — muddies the picture.
- In late April or early May 1955, Chuck approached Muddy Waters about recording, and Muddy sent him to Leonard Chess.
- To actually get out into a muddy field for a change and have some bombs go off certainly beat sitting around a dining room table.
- When Muddy got the message, he ran to a phone and called his boss.
- But these songs by Muddy—no one had ever made commercial records like this.
- Muddy came in week after week to ask when it would hit stores.
- "Sing," said the Bull, as the stiff, muddy ox-bow creaked and strained.
- A woolen skirt, made quite short, to clear the muddy streets, is the proper thing.
- They went together, picking their way across muddy streets and sidewalks encumbered with the cheap display of small tradesmen.
- Those muddy ankles and petticoats are not fit to be seen—there, now you are sweeping the pavement.
- The best anchorage here is under the flat-topped hill, at a third of a mile from the shore, in ten fathoms, muddy bottom.