Muckle Definition Verb

But for one and twice as much of Muckle, I wouldn`t trade him for all the cherries that came from Asia Minor. “Aye, weel, mony a mickle mak`s a muckle, as Dad used to say.” Dan looked into the water next to him and made the big “Munckle” bloom, ready for any chance. Rashes. 1870 version [ “muckle”] in MacLennan SNR (1909), Obviously, “muckle” could not be the horn of dinner, so Harvey went on the mouth, and Dan stunned the fish scientifically before pulling it on board and snatching the hook with the short wooden stick, which he called a “gob stick”. Many proverbs use alliterations: “Many a Mickle (little) makes a Muckle (much)”, rhymes: “Man suggests, God decrees”, parallelism: “Nothing dares, nothing is gained”, ellipses: “First come, first served”, etc. Muckle (comparatively more Muckle, superlative plus Muckle) And when I broke up, I was completely in a fuddle, a vortex – a muckle. They are used for their ony meenute, an` the room no sae muckle as sweepit. Lot, deal, herd, bargain, many, hateful, pile, lot, mass, chaos, mickle, mint, mountain, muckle, passel, pecking, pile, abundant, pot, quite little, raft, view, slew, spade, pile, tidy sum, wadnoun Like the parrot of the woman auld woman, “we dinna speak muckle, but we are bad at thinking”, and we think “aboot ye. He kens muckle wha kens when to speak, but far mair wha kens when he has to cut his tongue. Wi`a`, which he had in mind, was gey and unlikely that Mr. Soulis would be able to fall asleep.

Alex Massie also asks: Jeremy Clarkson is a laugh tube. muckle (third person singular simple present muckles, present participle giggling, past simple and past participle muckled) Then she gave him Donald`s blackboard with a pike Sklet and said, “No, mak a muckle A, cratur.” (often followed by “von”) a large number, a large quantity or a large scope Historical significance is “a little,” as in this 1860 sample: “a stack of letters”; “a lot of problems”; “a lot of money”; “He made a change on the stock exchange”; “See the rest of the winners in our huge photo series”; “It must have been expensive”; “many journalists”; “a wad of money” From Middle English mukel, muchel, from the same source as (perhaps a variant of) mickle.