Mixture vs Muller - What's the difference?
mixture | muller |
The act of mixing.
Something produced by mixing.
Something that consists of diverse elements
A medicinal compound
One who, or that which, mulls.
(arts) A grinding stone, held in the hand, used especially for preparing paints and powders.
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A vessel in which wine, etc., is mulled over a fire.
To grind up into, or as if into, powder.
* 1848 , On Lucifer Matches'', in the ''Pharmaceutical Journal , volume 7 (1847-8), page 523:
* 1901 , Patrick Walker, Six Saints of the Covenant , volume 1, page 31:
(metallurgy) A machine that mixes sand and clay for use in metal castings.
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(UK) To defeat or destroy utterly (as in a sport or competition).
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* 2007 , Stephen Cole, Thieves Like Us , page 220:
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As nouns the difference between mixture and muller
is that mixture is the act of mixing while muller is one who, or that which, mulls.As a verb muller is
to grind up into, or as if into, powder.As a proper noun Muller is
alternative form of Mueller|lang=en.mixture
English
(wikipedia mixture)Noun
(en noun)- The mixture of sulphuric acid and water produces heat.
- An alloy is a mixture of two metals.
- The day was a mixture of sunshine and showers.
- A teaspoonful of the mixture to be taken three times daily after meals
Derived terms
* cough mixtureExternal links
* * ----muller
English
Etymology 1
Noun
(en noun)Verb
(en verb)- The mixing is conducted in a water-bath, and during this process, and as long as the phosphorus is being ground or 'mullered ,' copious fumes are evolved.
- I have often thought in my melancholy days, these years bygone, that if it might be supposed, that the souls of our worthies were come from heaven, and the dust of their mullered bodies from their graves, and reunite again;
Etymology 2
Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* sand mullerEtymology 3
. One theory derives the term from the surname of the murderer Franz Müller,Cassell's Dictionary of Slang'' (ISBN 0304366366, 2005), page 976 while another theory derives it from the surname of German footballer Gerd Müller;''Dictionary of Contemporary Slang'' (ISBN 1408181819, 2014), page 298 both are phonologically improbable. ''The Oxford Guide to Etymology'' (ISBN 0191618780, 2009) asserts that it is "very probably of Romani origin, from a verb ultimately related to Sanskrit ''m?-' 'to die')."Verb
(en verb)- Then there were these zombie cult people in the beds, wires and stuff shoved into them, and then Yianna had these two minders and they were the ones who mullered us in Cairo, I swear, and one of them grabbed Con [...]