Want this question answered?
Be notified when an answer is posted
They were terrible muddy + smelly places
In the winter time, cold wet muddy, or snowy and frozen, in summer wet and muddy, rife with fleas and other viruses, putrid smell from rotten corpses, at all times an extremely horrible and uncomfortable place to be.
a muddy fish
No, "muddy" is not a singular noun. It can be an adjective, verb, or a part of a compound noun like "muddy water."
Muddy is an adjective in a normal situation, but in British English, you can 'muddy up' something, or 'muddy yourself', so both yes and no.
Yes, muddy is an adjective.
Muddy tide
A muddy bee is a ground bee. A muddy bee is bees that live in the ground.
No, the word muddy is not an adverb. Muddy is an adjective.The adverb form of the word is muddily.
No the Muddy Hand does not exist
A muddy beehind
abounding in or covered with mud sentence:You are so muddy from outside! sentence:Why are you muddy?