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dirt
[ durt ]
noun
- any foul or filthy substance, as mud, grime, dust, or excrement.
- earth or soil, especially when loose.
- something or someone vile, mean, or worthless:
After that last outburst of hers I thought she was dirt.
- moral filth; vileness; corruption.
- obscene or lewd language:
to talk dirt.
- Informal. gossip, especially of a malicious, lurid, or scandalous nature:
Tell me all the latest dirt.
Synonyms: scuttlebutt, rumor, slander, scandal
- private or personal information which if made public would create a scandal or ruin the reputation of a person, company, etc.
- Mining.
- crude, broken ore or waste.
- (in placer mining) the material from which gold is separated by washing.
dirt
/ dɜːt /
noun
- any unclean substance, such as mud, dust, excrement, etc; filth
- loose earth; soil
- packed earth, gravel, cinders, etc, used to make a racetrack
- ( as modifier )
a dirt track
- mining the gravel or soil from which minerals are extracted
- a person or thing regarded as worthless
- obscene or indecent speech or writing
- slang.gossip; scandalous information
- moral corruption
- do someone dirt slang.to do something vicious to someone
- dish the dirt informal.to spread malicious gossip
- eat dirt slang.to accept insult without complaining
- treat someone like dirtto have no respect or consideration for someone
Word History and Origins
Origin of dirt1
Word History and Origins
Origin of dirt1
Idioms and Phrases
- eat dirt, Informal. to accept blame, guilt, criticism, or insults without complaint; humble or abase oneself:
The prosecutor seemed determined to make the defendant eat dirt.
- do (someone) dirt. dirty ( def 18 ).
More idioms and phrases containing dirt
In addition to the idiom beginning with dirt , also see dig up (dirt) ; dish the dirt ; eat crow (dirt) ; hit the deck (dirt) ; pay dirt ; treat like dirt . Also see under dirty .Example Sentences
Rust depicts the manhunt for grandfather and grandson amidst a backdrop of snow-capped mountains and tumbleweed dirt towns.
And, perhaps above all, run more candidates who’ve gotten dirt under their fingernails, mud on the soles of their boots or grease stains on their coveralls.
Having an attorney general with so much potentially compromising dirt on him could be an asset, it being hard to say “no” to someone would could arguably ruin you.
Well, you know, all of that was dirt.
“Every little patch of dirt can be a wildlife habitat,” Tilford says.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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