n
A person who is addicted to consuming too much water.
n
A place where ashes are dumped.
n
The loss in weight of an animal carcass as it cools on a beam.
v
(transitive) To cover with dung or manure.
n
Waste from domestic toilets; water containing fecal matter.
n
A fertilizer, rich in nitrogen, made from dried blood
n
(US, dialect) A little elevated spot or clump of earth, roots, and grass, in a marsh or swamp.
n
A small patch of boggy ground.
n
(uncountable) A method of composting.
n
(chiefly in the plural) Scraps of steel left over from manufacturing processes.
n
(UK, dialect, archaic) Dried cattle dung used as fuel.
n
(Britain, dialect) Soot.
n
The decayed remains of organic matter that has rotted into a natural fertilizer.
n
(horticulture) a pile of garden or other organic waste which is left to decompose. See also compost.
n
A container for producing compost.
n
Compost, composted manure.
n
(uncountable, skiing, snowboarding) A heavy wet snow on which it is difficult to travel.
n
Something added to the soil as a fertilizer etc.
n
A waste product from working with metal.
n
(Britain) A mixture of coal and rock.
n
A mound of animal droppings for agricultural use.
n
Alternative form of dungheap
n
Alternative form of dunghill [A heap of dung, especially one for agricultural purposes.]
n
(obsolete) An animal that produces dung.
n
Alternative spelling of dung heap [A mound of animal droppings for agricultural use.]
n
Obsolete spelling of dunghill [A heap of dung, especially one for agricultural purposes.]
n
A heap of dung, especially one for agricultural purposes.
n
An application of manure, to fertilize land.
n
A pit or pile where dung is mixed with other organic material to produce manure for fertilizer.
n
(obsolete, dialect) dung heap
n
A place where manure is piled; a dungheap; a midden
n
(British spelling) Alternative spelling of fertilizer [A natural substance that is used to make the ground more suitable for growing plants.]
n
A natural substance that is used to make the ground more suitable for growing plants.
n
(obsolete, Cumberland) A miry bog.
n
The settlings of oil, molasses, etc., at the bottom of a barrel or hogshead.
v
(transitive, now chiefly dialectal, Scotland) To furnish with dung; manure; fatten with manure; fertilise.
n
A crop that is ploughed into the soil to improve its fertility
n
Unwanted vegetation or other plant-origin waste, able to be composted.
n
(now rare) (typically used in the plural) Dregs, sediment.
n
(UK) A general-purpose inorganic fertilizer for garden use.
n
(UK, dialect) A holloway; a kind of ancient road or track.
n
(UK, dialect, obsolete) A black, spongy soil.
n
(US) A shallow depression denuded of vegetation and potentially muddy, created by the wallowing of hogs.
n
Human excrement that is recycled via composting for agricultural or other purposes.
n
A large group of natural organic compounds, found in the soil, formed from the chemical and biological decomposition of plant and animal residues and from the synthetic activity of microorganisms.
n
(agriculture) composting: process employing raised planting beds constructed on top of decaying wood debris and other compostable biomass plant materials.
n
A generic range of horticultural composts.
v
(of meat) to remove excess blood from by washing and salting
n
(Isle of Man) animal dung
n
(Yorkshire) Manure or farm muck spread on farm land.
n
Scraps of food waste, especially that used for compost.
n
(Scotland) A bog; a mire.
n
(informal) Fertilizer for grass.
n
(agriculture) A substance that leaches from the soil.
n
Dead plant material, such as fallen leaves, bark, and twigs, that has fallen to the ground and may be used by animals as habitat or for nest-building, eventually decomposing and releasing nutrients into the soil.
n
(uncountable) Layer of fallen leaves and similar organic matter in a forest floor.
v
To cultivate by manual labor; to till; hence, to develop by culture.
adj
Covered in, or characteristic of, manure.
n
A place where dung is heaped up.
n
(dialect) Alternative spelling of midden [A dungheap.]
n
A natural source of such minerals licked by wild animals.
n
A compost heap; a dunghill.
n
(dialect, Scotland) A dunghill.
n
A heap of mud; by extension, any pile of metaphorical detritus
n
(agriculture, horticulture) Any material used to cover the top layer of soil to protect, insulate, or decorate it, or to discourage weeds or retain moisture.
n
A place where a pest (contagious disease) is present or likely
n
(US, colloquial) A disorderly pile of people formed by jumping upon a victim.
n
Alternative form of pissy bed [(Ireland, colloquial) The dandelion.]
n
Synonym of golden shower (“sexual fetish”)
n
The contents of a dry closet, treated for use as manure
n
(Canada, US, slang) A plain casino without ostentatious decoration.
n
A sod of grass-grown turf from the surface of a bog or from a field.
n
Alternative form of slag heap [A man-made mound or heap formed with the waste material (slag) as a by-product of coal mining. Can also refer to the waste by-product from a foundry or furnace, formed into such a mound.]
n
(Britain) A zone of muddy ground.
n
(agriculture) A mixture of animal waste, other organic material and sometimes water, stored in a slurry pit and used as fertilizer; also used in combination, as pig slurry, etc.
n
The refuse grease and fat collected in cooking, especially on shipboard.
n
(Australia, colloquial) A damper (bread) which has failed to rise, remaining a flat lump.
v
(livestock, obsolete, intransitive) To urinate, especially used of horses and cattle.
n
(obsolete) Manuring with dung.
n
(UK dialectal, Scotland) The dung of livestock left on a field to serve as manure or fertiliser.
n
Diluted fertilizer filtered through manure.
n
(dialectal or obsolete) dung
v
To cover a surface with loose material; especially to cover newly-sown seeds with a light dressing of soil or fertilizer
n
(obsolete) A dung beetle.
n
(agriculture) A reservoir for urine, etc., for manure.
v
To employ worms to break down organic waste into soil or humus
n
A solution, obtained by passing water through vermicompost, used as a compost
n
(geology) Material derived by mechanical and chemical erosion from the land, carried by streams to the sea.
n
The refuse or debris produced from cutting or dressing timber.
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