yes!
The verb of dirt is dirty. Used in the context of "to dirty something".
The word DIRTY is an adjective (dirty, dirtier, dirtiest), and a verb (dirty, dirties, dirtying, dirtied).
dirty
dirty = sucio/a (male /female) to dirty (verb) = ensuciar
pollute
Pollute, stain soil, smudge, contaminate, foul, are some synonyms for 'make dirty'.The word dirty itself can be used as verb. Example:Don't dirty your clothes when you play outside.
pollute
The word "dirty" is generally an adjective, and it describes a noun: there are dirty dishes in the sink. But it can also be a verb: to dirty (something), although it's not very common. If you are using it as a verb, the past tense would be "dirtied." The children dirtied the room, and we had to clean it up.
This sentence is not correct. You don't need the 'be' verb was. The dirty boy took a bath. This sentence is past simple. The dirty boy = subject took = verb - past tense of take bath = object
"Dirty" is usually an adjective, and as such it modifies one or more nouns. It can also be used as a transitive verb: "Don't dirty your clothes!"
Yes, "crashed" is a verb, depending on how you use! Example: this is an adjective ( The " crashed" car looked very dirty). Example: This a verb ( The car "crashed " into the wall).
Either noun or verb. Examples: What sort of apples are those? (noun) Please sort the apples into clean and dirty ones. (verb)