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Murky   /mˈərki/   Listen
Murky

adjective
(compar. murkier; superl. murkiest)
1.
(of liquids) clouded as with sediment.  Synonyms: cloudy, mirky, muddy, turbid.  "Muddy coffee" , "Murky waters"
2.
Dark or gloomy.  Synonym: mirky.  "Murky rooms lit by smoke-blackened lamps"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Murky" Quotes from Famous Books



... one roaring wave passed under us than another followed. Above our heads was a dark, murky sky, below and around the foaming sea. Even the best manned life-boat could scarcely have lived amid that foaming ...
— In the Eastern Seas • W.H.G. Kingston

... proportion of the elements of fertility, because the foreign properties with which it is charged, must continually vary with the condition of the atmosphere through which it falls, whether it be the thick and murky cloud which overhangs the coal-burning city, or the transparent ether of the mountain tops. We may see, too, by the tables, that the quantity of rain that falls, varies much, not only with the varying seasons of the year, and with the different seasons of different years, but ...
— Farm drainage • Henry Flagg French

... when they reached Edinburgh, and a murky night when they rode up Leith Wynd; the tall houses of Edinburgh hung over them; the few lights struggled against the thick, enveloping air. Figures came out of one dark passage, and disappeared into another. A body ...
— Graham of Claverhouse • Ian Maclaren

... onward. The sun waned in the gorgeous heaven, and set, surrounded by red and murky clouds. Then came silence and darkness. The Gothic watch-fires flamed one by one into the dusky air. The guards were doubled at the different posts. The populace were driven from the ramparts, and the fortifications of ...
— Antonina • Wilkie Collins

... to his youthful enthusiasm for her after her husband's death, he had only since learned that she was a natural conservator of public morals—the cold purity of the snowdrift in so far as the world might see, combined at times with the murky mood of the wanton. And yet, as he had also learned, she was ashamed of the passion that at times swept and dominated her. This irritated Cowperwood, as it would always irritate any strong, acquisitive, ...
— The Financier • Theodore Dreiser


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