Australian slang - Out-of-control behaviour; meaning overly fun or disruptive or partying behaviour or outlandish, rebelling behaviour; revelling.
Similar to the term, 'mucking around', which can have various meanings; 1. playing up, 2. doing whatever comes to mind usually in a lazy way or without much thought, direction or real goal. 3. Fiddling and playing around to the point of not getting anything beneficial done.
He was totally running a muck at the party and he fell through the table and smashed all the drinks while dancing.
The children were running a muck all day; they drove me nuts.
He was mucking around so much that I decided to leave, as he was never going to get anything done.
Messed Up, Fucked Up. Somethin u did or a place.
Man thats really Mucked Up how U snitched
taken from Merriam-Webster Dictionary, evolved from Chinook Indians. They first used a form of muckety-muck meaning an arrogant, self-important person, "high-muck-a-muck."
Man, those frattastic muckety-mucks really harsh my mellow. Their parties are so bernie. I'm swayze.
In poker, the residue left on the table after a player has just bluffed and bought the pot. Much residue is left on the table and it can never be removed.
Pat Shelby just left a gigantic muck stain on my new poker table after buying the pot during the last hand.
to thoroughly perform oral sex on a woman.
Anderson wasn't messing around, he really mucked out Lindsay.
A mucky-muck is anyone wearing slacks on the construction site. Or any other form of business that normally don't have people wearing suit slacks. Example; architects, project managers, owners.
Watch out, there are mucky-mucks on the job. Stay away from them. They're dangerous.
A pompous person of importance (often of imagined and real power). From the phrase "High Muck-a-Muck", itself descended from Chinook Jargon, a pidgin language combining words from English, French, and several Pacific Northwest Native American languages.
The president of our college is a mucky-muck.