See also: mud-kicker and mud kicker

English edit

Noun edit

mudkicker (plural mudkickers)

  1. Alternative form of mud-kicker
    1. Prostitute.
      • 2004, Bruce Jackson, Get Your Ass in the Water and Swim Like Me, →ISBN, page 106:
        She was three-quarter Kelsey with mossy glossy hair, She was a stompdown mudkicker and her mug was fair.
      • 1946, Milton “Mezz” Mezzrow, Bernard Wolfe, Really the Blues, New York, N.Y.: Random House:
        Whenever we'd be laying around late at night and we'd hear a toilet flush somewhere in the building, Mike would say “Uh, uh, there's one of them mudkickers again,” and he'd run up and chase them out, yelling “G'wan, you didn't pay no room rent around here, scat!"
      • 1971, Iceberg Slim, Long White Con: The Biggest Score of His Life, →ISBN, page 171:
        Within a month the Michigan mudkicker found her new master and the naive young pimp was stuck with a brace of howling crumb crushers.
    2. Laborer.
      • 2012, Jeff Shaara, A Blaze of Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Shiloh, →ISBN, page 64:
        Doesn't matter if these boys are illiterate mudkickers or college boys. They'll still aim that musket and do their best to kill that scoundrel over there who might be trying to do the same thing back.
      • 2011, David Maurer, The Big Con, →ISBN:
        They are just as superstitious as some mudkickers who believe in any kind of signs.