[ US /ˈdɝt/ ]
[ UK /dˈɜːt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. (of roads) not leveled or drained; unsuitable for all year travel
NOUN
  1. disgraceful gossip about the private lives of other people
  2. the part of the earth's surface consisting of humus and disintegrated rock
  3. obscene terms for feces
  4. the state of being covered with unclean things
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How To Use dirt In A Sentence

  • But they want it knocked back into a field of muck and dirt. Times, Sunday Times
  • You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is like an ocean; if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty. Mahatma Gandhi 
  • An incredulous snort came from Chris, and I gave him dirty look that silenced him up.
  • Crank baits trolled parallel to the shore or over sand flats in the DIRTY water where wind is blowing waves into the shore or shallows is good too regardless of the depth. Whats a good bait to use for walleye? ive never caught one but we now have land at a lake that is stocked with some.
  • Good for them and long may they stay down and dirty. The Sun
  • None of them were bleeding, so she fetched a washcloth and bathed them, one by one, just to be sure there wasn't any dirt in the wounds. GALILEE
  • According to him, ‘In Europe the farmers throw dirt around the asparagus in order to blanch it.’
  • The manciple accuses the cook of being drunk, and the cook falls off his horse after giving the Manciple a dirty look.
  • Many local children play on the dirt grounds around this farm with the cockerels running loose all day.
  • He dug the blade deep into the shallow indent that had been made and flung the dirt into a pile to his left.
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