muckworm
English
Noun
muckworm (plural muckworms)
- A larva living in mud or manure.
- Someone who gathers wealth through overwork of employees and sordid means; a miser.
- 1748, James Thomson, “Canto I”, in The Castle of Indolence:
- Here you a muckworm of the town might see, / At his dull desk, amid his legers stall'd, / Eat up with carking care and penurie; / Most like to carcase parch'd on gallows-tree.
- 1840, Douglas William Jerrold, “The Money-Lender”, in The Writings of Douglas Jerrold, published 1853, page 279:
- We have painted one Money-Lender — not the mere sordid muckworm of a century ago, but the man-eater of the present day.
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