• Mudlark

    Pronunciation

    • UK IPA: /ˈmÊŒdlɑːk/

    Origin

    From mud + lark.

    Full definition of mudlark

    Noun

    mudlark

    (plural mudlarks)
    1. (slang) A pig; pork.
    2. One who scavenges in river or harbor mud for items of value, especially in London during the Industrial Revolution. Also applies to a person scavenging sewers. A person that begs near a river. (rare) A sewer cleaner. (rare)
      • 1799, George Mogridge, Old Humphrey's walks in London and its neighbourhood, Besides these, there were the mudlark and the scupple hunter: the former prowling about at low water, receiving in his small bag such petty packages as he could get from his dishonest friends on board; and the later sneaking about the wharves and quays, under the pretense of wanting work, to pick up everything and anything that came to hand.
      • 1995, Isabel Fonseca, Bury Me Standing, Vintage 2007, p. 104:the children were nothing like inert: a large population of junior mudlarks, so long unwashed that you could hardly make them out, climbed among the ruins, cheerfully playing the games that all children play – pushing wheels with sticks, flipping rusty lids and bottle caps in makeshift tiddlywinks.
    3. A child who spends most of their time in the streets especially in slum areas. A child who plays in the mud. Any dirty or unkempt person.
    4. Nickname for a soldier of the Royal Engineers.
    5. Assorted birds that are found in muddy places or build their nests with mud. Especially and Alauda arvensis.
    6. (Australian) The Grallina cyanoleuca that builds its nest with mud into a bowl-like shape.
    7. A racing horse that performs well on muddy or wet tracks.
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