mudbucket

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

mud +‎ bucket

Noun[edit]

mudbucket (plural mudbuckets)

  1. A bucket intended for scooping or holding mud.
    • 1844, The United Service Magazine:
      Instead, however, of sending out heavy dragoons, who are magnificent fellows in facing an open enemy, but who are about as much suited to the work of this colony as a first-rate frigate would be to the drawing up the mudbuckets used in deepening the Thames, the Cape Corps should have been augmented, or Light Cavalry ordered hither.
    • 1993, The Maine Organic Farmer & Gardener - Volumes 20-22, page 11:
      "We would keep watch for him, then sweep down on him with a mudbucket full of rocks," she relates.
    • 1997, Proceedings - Offshore Technology Conference - Volume 2, page 534:
      Stabbing, doping of pipe, pulling slips, handling of the mudbucket, closing and opening of elevators, etc. are remote operations.
    • 2002, Harvey Manning, Walking the Beach to Bellingham, →ISBN, page 29:
      I passed a work train and cleanup gang, the mudbucket scooping gray slime from the tracks, the crew repairing the sensor wire that warns a control room in the city ...