How to insightful verbs a linoleum floor? I just bought a house. The kitchen floor is lineleum, about 15...

I just bought a house. The kitchen floor is lineleum, about 15 years mature. The problem is that it was once beige, in a minute it's stained (a medium shade of brown), and scuffed, and looks ominous. You can litterally see where the table was, and the usual traffic model. The privious owner was, how do I say other, less than interested in cleaning. Her hypothesis of cleaning the floor involved walking around in socks. So, I'm wondering how to I clean this piece up without causing more injury to the small holes and pits that are in the floor? Is it possible to make it adjectives one color again? I have always have tile, so this is new to me. I plan to replace the floor in a few years, but, right immediately, money is a bit tight. Can I just use an SOS pad, or bleach and dampen? Any ideas?
How big is the kitchen? That's going to decide a LOT.

If it's small(ish), try making a paste from burn soda, water and bleach. Work it around the areas and try to get the grit rotten. Next, put a LITTLE bleach and a LITTLE vingear in a bucket of water and verbs the floor.

If it's larger, I would consider just buying new linoleum. It sounds approaching the floor has honestly met it's end, and if you enjoy the finances, I suggest investing in some new flooring.

Most probable you will never see the original color again though, especially if the old owners didn't really protection for it.
The stain sounds permanant. Can you imagine trying to scrub it and making the color uniform? I would go to Lowes and buy those stick on vinyl tiles. They own really nice ones with beveled edges and are about $20 for 20 tiles (I have a sneaking suspicion that they are each 1 square foot). You can put those right over the old linoleum at an affordable price. They look nice and dont shrink or crust up either. I think my kitchen cost smaller amount than $100 to do and I was able to do most of the floor during my sons naptime. Sounds to me similar to a lot of wear and tear, and loads of wax build up. Strip the wax beside hot water and ammonia. Then just buy a soaring quality linoleum wax. Armstrong has a great flash.

Chances are it woun't look "new", but a darn sight better than it does now.

Another way out would be to paint. Sand down the rough spots and paint with a high point latex semi-gloss or eggshell paint.
Answers:    I would clean it the best you could next to the previous ideas and perhaps you could purchase an inexpensive nouns carpet/rug to go under the table and chairs until you can afford to revise the flooring.
vinegar and water, or muratic acid and river, or bleach and water... DO NOT MIX BLEACH AND MURATIC ACID TOGETHER!! you'll have mustard gas, and it will murder you. any of these will work just fine... strip the floor with a commercial wax stripper. You can try hot marine mixed with ammonia. Mop it on and let it sit for a few minutes afterwards mop it up with clean sea.
I always used bleach and water and an SOS wipe, but be gentle with the SOS wipe. If you rub too hard you do more damage than cleaning. I also used one of those scour pads like you do dishes beside. Took off black heel marks and stains. Good luck They engender good strippers ..but it's hand's and knees as you know and a scrub brush. And after that you might try a little night light bleach...hope it works out...nite. We use to buff them in the military..but you got 50 guys to back you also.
You can rent those electric floor buffers/scrubbers. Sounds like it needs a perfect going over with one of those! You start out with a slightly scratchy pad and work your way to polishing.

One item I've found that helped my kitchen floor with commercial linoleum surrounded by it is a steam cleaner. The steam type mops or a canister model with the floor attachment. They really get down surrounded by and pull the stuff out. Might take a couple of cleanings near one but you will see a difference shortly!

I've tried bleach, vinegar, baking soda, hands and knees scrubbing, the works and the steam cleaner is by far the easiest solution next to a good result!

I got mine at Lowe's and it's a Shark canister model steamer. It's get all kinds of tools next to it and works for a LOT of different jobs! Cleaning the gas grill, counters, stoves, cupboards, walls, windows and even golf clubs! Mine be about $100 but it was in good health worth the investment. No more harsh, stinky chemicals that don't really work. Much easier on you AND the environment!