moot earth
English
editEtymology
editmoot (“tree stump”) + earth (“soil”)
Noun
edit- (West Country) Soil taken from between the roots of a tree.
- 1794, James MacPhail, “Of Manures, Earths &c”, in A Treatise on the Culture of the Cucumber[1], pages 510–511:
- It is the nature of lime to attract oils, and dissolve vegetable bodies: Hence arise the good effects of lime in the improvement of black moorish land. Moot earth seems to consist of dissolved and half-dissolved vegetable substances, and it is said that lime assimilates the one, and dissolves the other.