It comes from the chorus of the song "The Hippopotamus" by Michael Flanders and Donald Swann: Mud, Mud, glorious mud Nothing quite like it for cooling the blood! So follow me, follow Down to the hollow And there let us wallow In glorious mud
The field they were all in became trampled down, heavy rain on the second day created one big mud pile, so in a complete hippie attitude they accepted the mud and enjoyed it rather than becoming negative.
A catfish that hides at the bottom of a river in the mud.
The title of the song is actually The Hippopotamus Song, but everyone seems to call it by Mud, Mud, Glorious Mud. It has been recorded many times over the years by many artistes, the most recent being John Lithgow of 3rd Rock from the Sun Fame.
Big Pile of Mud was created in 1988.
Bog
The word thick only has one syllable.
In the 16th Century the word 'mud' was used to describe anything that was worthless and was linked with other English phrases such as 'dragged through the mud - mud in your eye. In the 19th century more phrases came into being, such as 'as thick as mud - as rich as mud - as fat as mud'. It was only a matter of time before the word was used in connection with someone's name. Thus an insult came into being as 'your name is mud' meaning you are unpopular.
You could use the sentence, 'The custard was thick as mud.'
Well i believe the production of mud and ash makes a thick muddy texture
YES!! Girls like to get completely cover in thick mud as much as boys do. But I perfer to see them in mud wearing one-piece swimsuits. (Doesn't it make them look better that way?)
A suffix that you can add to 'word 'mud' is 'less'. The word mudless means that something does not have mud on it.
The Kikuyu word for the English word mud is matope.
yes
The Abaluhya word for mud is translated to matope.
It is silt.
i dropped the locket in the thick mud.