Mure vs Muke - What's the difference?
mure | muke |
(obsolete) wall
:— Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part II, [IV, 4], line 2870
(obsolete) husks of fruit from which the juice has been squeezed. Perhaps an old spelling of myrrh
(obsolete) mural (as a postmodifier)
(obsolete) to wall in or fortify
(obsolete) To enclose or imprison within walls.
* 1995, David Rabe, Those the River Keeps [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0802133517&id=zJs2pCV0kD4C&pg=PA32&lpg=PA32&dq=muke&sig=2E7pkTLvarxol5BNZ63Sbxfh9kg]
(Chinese mythology) A kind of tree spirit.
* 2004, Richard von Glahn, The Sinister Way [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0520234081&id=Qyz5I7fi4PQC&pg=PA92&lpg=PA93&printsec=8&dq=muke&sig=JY79_rk9YR_usCiystUTxqVr9RQ]
As a verb mure
is to die.As a noun muke is
or muke can be (chinese mythology) a kind of tree spirit.mure
English
Noun
(en noun)- (Shakespeare)
- No, no; he cannot long hold out these pangs.
- Th' incessant care and labour of his mind
- Hath wrought the mure that should confine it in
References
* Meaning "Husks of fruit": 1949', John Dover Wilson (compiler), ' Life in Shakespeare's England. A Book of Elizabethan Prose , Cambridge at the University Press. 1st ed. 1911, 2nd ed. 1913, 8th reprint. In Glossary and Notes. From Wright's Dialect Dict.Adjective
(-)Verb
- (Spenser)
- The five kings are mured in a cave. — John. x. (Heading).
Anagrams
* ----muke
English
Etymology 1
Cf. moke, mookNoun
(en noun)- Look, I says to myself, Phil is out there trying to live this fucking life of a muke', he has got to be sick of it, but he is not a ' muke , he is a serious guy.
Etymology 2
(etyl), perhaps .Noun
(muke)- According to the fifth-century Gazette of Nankang,'' the ''muke'''/shanzao'' likewise resembled humans in form and speech, but instead of hands and feet they had birdlike talons and nested in high trees. The tree-dwelling ''shandu'' and '''''muke'' both seem to have some affinity with a changeling bird known as ''ye, which nested in the high trees of the remote mountains of southern China.