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Muddiness   Listen
Muddiness

noun
1.
The wetness of ground that is covered or soaked with water.  Synonyms: sloppiness, wateriness.  "The water's muddiness made it undrinkable" , "The sloppiness of a rainy November day"
2.
A mental state characterized by a lack of clear and orderly thought and behavior.  Synonyms: confusedness, confusion, disarray, mental confusion.
3.
The quality of being cloudy.  Synonyms: cloudiness, murkiness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Muddiness" Quotes from Famous Books



... crocodiles in the lake, and some of an extraordinary size, the fishermen say that it is a rare thing for any one to be carried off by these reptiles. When crocodiles can easily obtain abundance of fish—their natural food—they seldom attack men; but when unable to see to catch their prey, from the muddiness of the water in floods, they ...
— A Popular Account of Dr. Livingstone's Expedition to the Zambesi and Its Tributaries • David Livingstone

... It was one peculiarity, distinguishing Zenobia from most of her sex, that she needed for her moral well-being, and never would forego, a large amount of physical exercise. At Blithedale, no inclemency of sky or muddiness of earth had ever impeded her daily walks. Here in town, she probably preferred to tread the extent of the two drawing-rooms, and measure out the miles by spaces of forty feet, rather than bedraggle ...
— The Blithedale Romance • Nathaniel Hawthorne

... mathematics. Not so much the actual tool was needed, as the right to judge the product of the tool. Ignorant as one was of the finer values of French or German, and often deceived by the intricacies of thought hidden in the muddiness of the medium, one could sometimes catch a tendency to intelligible meaning even in Kant or Hegel; but one had not the right to a suspicion of error where the tool of thought was algebra. Adams could see in such parts of the "Grammar" as ...
— The Education of Henry Adams • Henry Adams

... shown in fig. 24, perhaps using in alternation bright blue and black instead of a single medium tint of blue all over. At a slight distance the tone may be the same in either case, but this method gives a pleasantly varied and refined effect, which avoids muddiness, and shows up the pattern better. This same method is used for expressing form more clearly as well as for colour; waves of hair, for instance, are much more clearly expressed when ...
— Embroidery and Tapestry Weaving • Grace Christie

... true salt, serviceable, unsentimental sea. It would be well, however, if he would sometimes take a higher flight. The castle of Ischia gave him a grand subject, and a little more invention in the sky, a little less muddiness in the rocks, and a little more savageness in the sea, would have made it an impressive picture; it just misses the sublime, yet is a fine work, and better engraved than usual by ...
— Modern Painters Volume I (of V) • John Ruskin

... any of us, indeed, ever see home again? I thought of my father's wrath turned to sorrow because he had refused to gratify a son's natural wish and present him with a real rowboat.... Out of the corners of our eyes we watched the water creeping around the gunwale, and the very muddiness of it seemed to enhance its coldness, to make the horrors of its depths more mysterious and hideous. The voice ...
— The Crossing • Winston Churchill

... Turbidity — N. turbidity, cloudiness, fog, haze, muddiness, haziness, obscurity. nephelometer[instrument to measure turbidity]. Adj. turbid, thick, muddy, obfuscated, fuliginous[obs3], hazy, misty, foggy, vaporous, nubiferous[obs3]; cloudy (cloud) 353. ...
— Roget's Thesaurus

... ever been the idols of aspiring souls. All-inclusive, yet simple; noble, clean, luminous, stable, rigorous, true;—what more ideal refuge could there be than such a system would offer to spirits vexed by the muddiness and accidentality of the world of sensible things? Accordingly, we find inculcated in the theological schools of to-day, almost as much as in those of the fore-time, a disdain for merely possible or probable truth, ...
— The Varieties of Religious Experience • William James

... once as the more enduring quality of self-respect, was extinguished in the five and thirty penitential years of her marriage. She had a small vacant face, where the pink and white had run into muddiness, a mouth that sagged at the corners like the mouth of a frightened child, and eyes of a sickly purple, which had been compared by Cyrus to "sweet violets," in the only compliment he ever paid her. Thirty-five years ago, ...
— Virginia • Ellen Glasgow



Words linked to "Muddiness" :   opacity, mental confusion, fog, muddy, mistiness, obfuscation, confusedness, half-cock, bewilderment, haziness, distraction, cognitive state, mystification, wetness, haze, turbidity, perplexity, befuddlement, opaqueness, steaminess, jamais vu, turbidness, vaporousness, puzzlement, disorientation, bemusement, vapourousness, state of mind, daze, bafflement



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