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No, "mud caked" is a noun-verb combination: "The mud caked on their uniforms was extremely difficult to clean."

The word "mudcaked" is an adjective. It describes something being caked in mud, e.g. "The football team's mudcaked uniforms were extremely difficult to clean."

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9y ago
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10y ago

The noun 'mud' is a common noun, a general word for a mixture of soil and water.

A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.

Examples:

The mud was tracked into the house. (subject of the sentence)

The mess that the mud made was not easy to clean up. (subject of the clause)

He took the water and made mud. (direct object of the verb 'made')

The house was made from bricks of mud. (object of the preposition 'of')

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12y ago

In English, there is no distinction between masculine, feminine and neuter. Noun and verb forms are neutral. Gender is shown by different forms or different words such a king and queen or man and woman.

The noun mud is not a male or a female, mud is neutral.

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13y ago

No, muddy is a adjective because it describes something.

Muddy boy

Muddy boots

Muddy day

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11y ago

The pronoun that takes the place of the noun mud is "it". The noun mud is an uncountable noun, a word for a substance, so that a only singular pronoun will take its place.

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10y ago

Mud is a noun.

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8y ago

No it is a noun. the adjective is muddy.

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Wiki User

15y ago

Yes.

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Q: Is mud masculine noun
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