It means mud or animal poop. Or it can be an ephusation of the f-word. like muck it or you're full of muck. but usually used as mud.
The term "muck fire" is a compound noun, with the noun fire modified by the noun muck as a noun adjunct (attributive noun).
I think it means: streamlined, commonplace, mainstream etc... *It's Muck and Mire; Sort of like a swamp. Usually used to refer to something like a tough situation or bad time and place. Meyer: is from the Middle High German word "meiger," meaning "higher or superior". So "Muck and Meyer" would mean "Bad and Good". Which is contradiction and could also have useful meaning.
The term "Up to our eyes in Muck and bullets" was applied to conditions in the trenches of World War 1. It would be interesting to hear of any earlier precedents. Presumably saying "Through much an bullets" implies having come through (survived) appalling conditions. Paul W
Fires that are underground, usually in ligite soil
a minor league team from new york
Dirt or mud. Can also refer to excrement (e.g. "dog muck").
Dirt, filth, excrement.
to annoy someone
you mean how MUCH
there are more men to muck around with if you know what i mean
No, muck fires can start anywhere there is muck. That's why they're called MUCK fires, not Florida fires.
The fire is burning underground in the peat or other materials.
You need to rephrase your question because it is difficult to understand what you mean.
The truck got stuck in the muck.
Muck is a mass noun, it has no plural form.
Daniel Muck was born in 1976.
Daniel Muck is 168 cm.