I believe it may mean "to damage someone's reputation in a malicious way". See the translations for the idiom "do someone dirt" on this webpage:
dirt
"Do your dirt" means to do what needs to be done, even if it involves questionable or dishonest actions. It can also imply taking care of necessary tasks or handling difficult situations without concern for legality or ethics.
The meaning of life is to give life meaning……..
The Oriya meaning of "Sanidhya" is presence or proximity.
According to truth-conditional theories of meaning, the meaning of a sentence is determined by its truth conditions, or the circumstances under which the sentence would be true or false. In other words, the meaning of a sentence is tied to its truth value in different scenarios, and understanding the meaning of a sentence involves understanding what would make it true or false.
In the Kiswahili language of African origin, "Samahani!" has the meaning of "Excuse me!"
The Telugu meaning of "saathiya" is "premika" or "premi."
Gandagi.
Geophagy is the term for the form of pica in which the patient eats dirt.
Foul matter; dirt, rubbed in; sullying blackness, deeply ingrained., To sully or soil deeply; to dirt.
Health professionals usually refer to dirt in the eye as an ocular foreign body.
Silt
The word meaning "soil" is spelt as you have in the question, dirt.
Red dirt~ it's red and dirty Brown dirt~it's brown and dirty Black dirt~it's brown and dirty And finally..Pink dirt! verry rare!!!!
Pari means dirt and haka means a war dance
"Clean" or "pure" (technically means "without dirt")
"He turned the dirt" is a short way of saying, "He turned over the dirt", meaning that he dug the shovel into the dirt, lifted the dirt up, and turned it over, or upside down. This is the ages-old method of preparing soil for planting. These days, dirt is 'turned over' with the use of tractor-pulled plows.
This probably their is a mole in your yard. They throw up dirt as they dig underground looking for things to eat.
How about: earth, soil, ground... ? Is that good? Hope I helped!