to muck out
1muck out — ˌmuck ˈout [intransitive/transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they muck out he/she/it mucks out present participle mucking out past tense …
2muck out — phrasal verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms muck out : present tense I/you/we/they muck out he/she/it mucks out present participle mucking out past tense mucked out past participle mucked out to clean a place or building where farm animals… …
3muck out — PHRASAL VERB If you muck out a stable or a farm animal s home, you clean out all the faeces and old hay. [BRIT] [V P n (not pron)] He stamped off to muck out the pigsty... [V P] Here s how to muck out. [Also V n P] …
4muck out — verb To clean the excrement and other rubbish from the area where an animal is kept, such as a horse stable or a dog kennel. Could you muck out Tobys stable, please? …
5muck out — phr verb Muck out is used with these nouns as the object: ↑stall …
6muck out — clean out the mud or filth (i.e. from a barn, mine, etc.) …
7muck out — Clean (a place) …
8muck something out — ˌmuck ˈout | ˌmuck sthˈout derived to clean out the place where an animal lives • Part of her job was to muck out the stables. Main entry: ↑muckderived …
9muck — muck, v. i. To excavate and remove muck[5]. Often used with out, as, to muck out a round. [RDH] . . . Inco is still much more advanced than other mining companies. He says that the LKAB mine in Sweden is the closest rival. He predicts that, by… …
10muck — ► NOUN 1) dirt or rubbish. 2) manure. ► VERB 1) (muck up) informal spoil. 2) (muck about/around) Brit. informal behave in a silly or aimless way. 3) ( …