• Mudsill

    Origin

    "1685, 'lowest sill of a house,' from mud + sill. The word entered U.S. political history by James Henry Hammond of South Carolina, March 4, 1858, in U.S. Senate, alluding to the very mudsills of society, and the term subsequently was embraced by Northern workers in the pre-Civil War sectional rivalry." (OED, 2007)

    Alternative forms

    Full definition of mudsill

    Noun

    mudsill

    (plural mudsills)
    1. The lowest sill of a structure, usually placed in or on the ground.
    2. (figuratively) A particularly low or dirty place/state; the nadir of something (see rock bottom)"The Pre-Historic Era represented the mudsill of human development."
    3. (dated) A person of low status or humble provenance.
      • 1861, Theodore Winthrop, ,We were now miserable mercenaries, serving for low pay and rough rations. Read the Southern papers and you will see us described. “Mudsills,” — that, I believe, is the technical word.
      • 1868, Carl Schurz, General Lee throw down his sword and surrender his invincible Southern legions to that poor little Northern mud-sill, a late tanner from Illinois!
      • 1903, Hightower Theodore Kealing, Though the mudsill of the labor world, he whistles as he hoes, and no dark broodings or whispered conspirings mar the cheerful acceptance of the load he bears.
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