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Mutter   /mˈətər/   Listen
Mutter

verb
(past & past part. muttered; pres. part. muttering)
1.
Talk indistinctly; usually in a low voice.  Synonyms: maunder, mumble, mussitate.
2.
Make complaining remarks or noises under one's breath.  Synonyms: croak, gnarl, grumble, murmur.
noun
1.
A low continuous indistinct sound; often accompanied by movement of the lips without the production of articulate speech.  Synonyms: murmur, murmuration, murmuring, mussitation, muttering.
2.
A complaint uttered in a low and indistinct tone.  Synonyms: grumble, grumbling, murmur, murmuring, muttering.



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"Mutter" Quotes from Famous Books



... you, mind! Strangers here fur tea. Anyhow it ort to go down. Nuffin but de best ob currant Miss Grey 'ud use in her father's house. Lord save us!"—in an underbreath. "But it's fur de honor ob de family,"—in a mutter. ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XII. July, 1863, No. LXIX. - A Magazine Of Literature, Art, And Politics • Various

... 'Did—did——' The sentence died in an unintelligible mutter. He seemed to utter a name I could not catch. All the time I was watching him intently, and never shall I forget the look that passed over his face. He had been very pale before, but now his pallor was ghastly. For a moment he looked almost like a dead man, save for the gleam in his ...
— "The Pomp of Yesterday" • Joseph Hocking

... opened my trunk to pack it and saw those dozen or more large square brown envelopes I was appalled. They looked so important, so sinister, they seemed to mutter of State secrets, war maps, spy data. I knew that trunks were often searched at Bordeaux, and I knew that if mine were those envelopes never would leave France. I should be fortunate ...
— The Living Present • Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton

... had got that title—led her mother in to dinner, Presbury gave her his arm. On the way he found opportunity to mutter: ...
— The Price She Paid • David Graham Phillips

... hotel-keeper snored. Alvina became almost comatose, in the burning heat of the carriage. And again the train rumbled on. And again she saw glimpses of stations, glimpses of snow, through the chinks in the curtained windows. And again there was a jerk and a sudden halt, a drowsy mutter from the sleepers, somebody uncovering the light, and somebody covering it again, somebody looking out, somebody tramping down the ...
— The Lost Girl • D. H. Lawrence


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