muscled up

See also: muscled-up

English

Adjective

muscled up (comparative more muscled up, superlative most muscled up)

  1. Having large, well-developed muscles.
    • 2001 (Sept.),‎ "Good Hurlers are Born with Pitching Ability", Baseball Digest 60(9): 74
      "It's almost like guys who throw hard have to be born with a certain kind of body. They're tall and slender like Kevin Brown or Randy Johnson. They're strong, don't get me wrong, but they're not all muscled up."
    • 1983 (Jan 17), Julia Vitullo-Martin, "Back in the Saddle Again", New York Magazine‎ 16(3): 51
      "We've got to get the guys muscled up first," explains Byrnes, "or somebody's back will go out when we canter."
    • 2005, Matt de la Peña, Ball Don't Lie‎, page 224
      He slips the clean shirt over his muscled-up black shoulders. Takes his shoes and socks off and slides his feet into Nike sandals.
    • 2007, Jim Dent, Twelve Mighty Orphans, page 228
      The crowd groaned when the muscled-up, raw-boned Paris boys stopped the Mites once more on fourth down, just inches from the goal.
    • 2008, Terrence Real, The New Rules of Marriage, page 35
      Bob is short, bald, and muscled up, with a thick neck and huge biceps and thighs.

Alternative forms

Verb

muscled up

  1. simple past tense and past participle of muscle up
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.