mudder

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See also: Mudder and MUDder

English

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

mud +‎ -er

Noun

mudder (plural mudders)

  1. A racehorse that performs well on muddy or wet tracks.
    Synonym: mudlark

Etymology 2

MUD +‎ -er

Alternative forms

Noun

mudder (plural mudders)

  1. (Internet) A participant in a multi-user dungeon.
    • 1993, Leonard N. Foner, “What's an Agent, Anyway? A Sociological Case Study”, in MIT Media Lab, archived from the original on 9 December 2022:
      For mudders like myself (an AI researcher), ’bots and their associated likely behavior patterns are old hat.
    • 1997, Gov't Cheeze, “ Builders and Players (twinks need not apply)”, in rec.games.mud.admin (Usenet):
      You will not find any stock. You will not find any easy mobs. You will not find any +100 dam 'big swords of I win'. You will not find twink mudders. You will not hear about how Jim the Kewl dOOd scored last night at his sister's birthday party. You will not find bots.

Etymology 3

Noun

mudder (plural mudders)

  1. Pronunciation spelling of mother.

Anagrams

Danish

Etymology

From Middle Low German modder, mudder (mire, mud, sludge).

Pronunciation

Noun

mudder n (singular definite mudderet, not used in plural form)

  1. mud, mire

Derived terms

See also

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From German Low German modder.

Noun

mudder n (definite singular mudderet)

  1. mud

Derived terms

References

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From German Low German modder.

Noun

mudder n (definite singular mudderet)

  1. mud

Derived terms

References

Swedish

Etymology

Borrowed from German Modder. Cognate of Danish mudder, Norwegian Bokmål mudder, Norwegian Nynorsk mudder.

Noun

mudder n

  1. mud, sludge, silt

Declension

Declension of mudder 
Uncountable
Indefinite Definite
Nominative mudder muddret
Genitive mudders muddrets

Derived terms

References