brick vs muck

brick

noun
  • A kilogram of cocaine. 

  • A shot which misses, particularly one which bounces directly out of the basket because of a too-flat trajectory, as if the ball were a heavier object. 

  • A power brick; an external power supply consisting of a small box with an integral male power plug and an attached electric cord terminating in another power plug. 

  • A hardened rectangular block of mud, clay etc., used for building. 

  • The colour brick red. 

  • An electronic device, especially a heavy box-shaped one, that has become non-functional or obsolete. 

  • A projectile. 

  • Such hardened mud, clay, etc. considered collectively, as a building material. 

  • A carton of 500 rimfire cartridges, which forms the approximate size and shape of a brick. 

  • Something shaped like a brick. 

  • A community card (usually the turn or the river) which does not improve a player's hand. 

adj
  • Extremely cold. 

verb
  • To blunder; to screw up. 

  • To make into bricks. 

  • To build, line, or form with bricks. 

  • To hit someone or something with a brick. 

  • To make an electronic device nonfunctional and usually beyond repair, essentially making it no more useful than a brick. 

muck

noun
  • Heroin. 

  • Semen. 

  • Soft (or slimy) manure. 

  • The pile of discarded cards. 

  • Anything filthy or vile. Dirt; something that makes another thing dirty. 

  • Grub, slop, swill 

  • Slimy mud, sludge. 

verb
  • To manure with muck. 

  • To shovel muck. 

  • To vomit. 

  • To do a dirty job. 

  • To pass, to fold without showing one's cards, often done when a better hand has already been revealed. 

How often have the words brick and muck occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )