Dictionary: MUM'BLING-LY – MUN'DANE

a | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j | k | l | m | n | o | p | q | r | s | t | u | v | w | x | y | z |

1234567891011121314151617181920
2122232425262728293031323334353637383940
4142434445464748495051525354555657585960
6162636465666768697071727374757677787980
81828384858687888990919293949596979899100
101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120
121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140
141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155

MUM'BLING-LY, adv.

With a low inarticulate utterance. [Mumble and mutter are not always synonymous; mutter often expresses peevishness, which mumble does not.]

MUM'-CHANCE, n.

  1. A game of hazard with dice. [Local.]
  2. A fool. [Local.]

MUMM, v.t. [Dan. mumme, a mask; D. mommen, to mask; G. mumme, a mask or muffle; mummeln, to mask, to mumble; Fr. mummer; Sw. förmumma, to personate; probably allied to the Gr. μωμος, Momus, the deity of sport and ridicule, a buffoon; for in Rabbinic, this word is used for a mask. Buxt. 1219. The primary sense of this word and mum is evidently to close, shut or cover.]

To mask; to sport or make diversion in a mask or disguise. Hubberd's Tale.

MUM'MER, n.

One who masks himself and makes diversion in disguise originally, one who made sport by gestures without speaking. Jugglers and dancers, antics, mummers. Milton.

MUM'MER-Y, n. [Fr. momerie; Sp. momeria. See Mumm.]

  1. Masking; sport; diversion; frolicking in masks; low contemptible amusement; buffoonery. Your fathers / Disdained the mummery of foreign strollers. Fenton.
  2. Farcical show; hypocritical disguise and parade to delude vulgar minds.

MUM-MI-FI-CA'TION, n.

The act of making into a mummy.

MUM'MI-FI-ED, pp.

Made into a mummy.

MUM'MI-FORM, a.

Resembling a mummy.

MUM'MI-FY, v.t. [infra.]

To make into a mummy. Journ. of Science.

MUM'MI-FY-ING, ppr.

Making into a mummy.

MUM'MOY-CHOG, n.

A small fish of the carp kind. Pennant.

MUM'MY, n. [It. mummia; Sp. and Port. momia. In Arabic, مُومِيَا momia, is wax, bees-wax, and a mummy; Pers. مُومْ moum, wax. A substance thus called is found in Corasan and in the deserts of Kerman, in Persia, and according to Chardin, it is a gum distilling from rocks. It seems to have some resemblance to asphalt. Qu. the pissasphaltus of Pliny.]

  1. A dead human body embalmed and dried after the Egyptian manner; a name perhaps given to it from the substance used in preserving it. There are two kinds of mummies. The first are bodies dried by the heat of the sun. Such are found in the sands of Libya. The other kind is taken from the catacombs in Egypt. Encyc.
  2. The name of two substances prepared for medicinal use, which according to Hill are, the one, the dried flesh of human bodies embalmed with myrrh and spice; the other, a liquor running from such mummies when newly prepared, or when affected by great heat and damps. This is preserved in vials, and if suffered to dry, becomes solid. But it is alledged that the first sort consists of pieces of the flesh of executed criminals, or other flesh filled with bitumen and other ingredients. But see the opinion of Chardin, supra.
  3. There are found in Poland natural mummies lying in caverns, supposed to be the remains of persons who in time of war took refuge in caves, but being discovered were suffocated by their enemies. These bodies are dried, with the flesh and skin shrunk almost close to the bones, and are of a blackish color. Encyc.
  4. Among gardeners, a sort of wax used in grafting and planting trees. Chambers. To beat to a mummy, to beat soundly, or to a senseless mass.

MUMP, v.t. [D. mompen. See Mum and Mumble.]

  1. To nibble; to bite quick; to chew with continued motion; as, a mumping squirrel. Otway.
  2. To talk loud and quick.
  3. To go begging. Ainsworth.
  4. To deceive; cheat.

MUMP'ER, n.

A beggar. Johnson.

MUMP'ING, n.

Begging tricks; foolish tricks; mockery.

MUMP'ING, ppr.

  1. Chewing with continued motion; nibbling.
  2. Begging with false pretense.

MUMP'ISH, a.

Dull; heavy; sullen; sour.

MUMP'ISH-LY, adv.

Dully; wearily.

MUMPS, n. [See Mum, Mumble, Mumm.]

  1. Sullenness; silent displeasure. [Little used.] Skinner.
  2. A disease; a peculiar and specific unsuppurative inflammation of the parotid glands.

MUNCH, v.i.

To chew eagerly by great mouthfuls. [Vulgar.] Dryden.

MUNCH, v.t. [perhaps Fr. manger, or from the same root.]

To chew by great mouthfuls. [Vulgar.] Shak.

MUNCH'ER, n.

One that munches. Johnson.

MUNCH'ING, ppr.

Chewing by great mouthfuls.

MUND, n. [Sax. mund, protection, patronage, peace, is found in old laws; as, mundbrece, that is, a breaking or violation of the peace. It is retained in names, as in Edmund, Sax. eadmund, happy peace, as in Gr. Irenæus, Hesychius.]

Gibson.

MUN'DANE, n. [L. mundanus, from mundus, the world.]

Belonging to the world; as, mundane sphere; mundane space. Bentley.