Mush \Mush\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Mushed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Mushing}.] To travel on foot, esp. across the snow with dogs. -- v. t. To cause to travel or journey. [Rare] [Colloq., Alaska & Northwestern U. S.] [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
Mush \Mush\, n. [Cf. Gael. mus, muss, pap, porridge, any thick preparation of fruit, OHG. muos; akin to AS. & OS. m[=o]s food, and prob, to E. meat. See {Meat}.] Meal (esp. Indian meal) boiled in water; hasty pudding; supawn. [U.S.]
Mush \Mush\, v. t. [Cf. F. moucheter to cut with small cuts.] To notch, cut, or indent, as cloth, with a stamp.
Mush \Mush\, n. [Perh. short for mush on, a corrupt of E. marchons, the cry of the voyageurs and coureurs de bois to their dogs.] A march on foot, esp. across the snow with dogs; as, he had a long mush before him; -- also used attributively. [Colloq., Alaska & Northwestern U. S.] [Webster 1913 Suppl.]
Carreras' replacement as John the Baptist was Boiko Zvetanov, a young Bulgarian with a sweet voice, who sang with little dramatic purpose in a mush of vowel sounds.
He turns everything into mush." Gone, too, are the days when hearing five measures could identify an orchestra.
When the mix turns to mush, he puts it into his patented press, squeezes out the water and makes wood-like blocks, 17-by-nine-by-five inches.
Renouncing both religious and scientific values in favor of a statist and egalitarian mush, however, prevailing segments of the American legal profession and the arts community have become swollen parasites that threaten the survival of their host.
Seismic shock waves could "liquefy" the sand in the dam's foundation, turning it into quicksand or "mush."
"His support is really sort of mush," Klett said of Dukakis. "It's not really a strong thing." The ABC-Post poll found a measure of "negative voting" in the Dukakis support.