mud out
Appearance
English
[edit]Verb
[edit]mud out (third-person singular simple present muds out, present participle mudding out, simple past and past participle mudded out)
- To remove dirt or mud from an area.
- Before we start renovating, we'll need to mud out the whole building.
- 1908, Records and Briefs in Cases Decided by the Supreme Court of Minnesota:
- Q. First drilling and then you mudded out and drilled again? Yes, sir.
- 1999, Esther Burroughs, Splash the Living Water, →ISBN:
- I worked beside those young people and mudded out a small African-American church and helped to replace dry wall.
- 2009, Heralding Unheard Voices:
- Thus far, they have mudded out 42 homes and continue their work.
- To become unusable or unreachable due to mud.
- 1991, Michael Tobias, Sally Peters, Fatal Exposure, →ISBN, page 100:
- What with the floodin' an' road mudded out an' snow too wet to three-wheelie — why, it's a mess.
- 1998, Government Contracts Reporter:
- In that evaluation if there was a rain day where they were mudded out or if on the case of the erection crew, where there was a day that they were blown out because of strong winds and couldn't erect, I did not use those days.
- 2004, Pennie Wise, Big Skies & Cowpies: Building A Home And Family In Montana, →ISBN:
- We are waiting once more for logs. They say they're mudded out.