The verb of dirt is dirty.
Used in the context of "to dirty something".
yes and it is past-tense
In general use, yes. Dirt, however, can mean any messy substance. Soil (aside from its use as a verb) more usually is applied to horticultural material in which grass or plants are grown.
Interesting question. It is a noun when you are talking about the object that you use in the garden to move dirt. When you talk about what you are doing in the the garden, it becomes a verb... I used the shovel to dig up the daisies. (Noun) I shovelled the daisies out of the grass. (Verb)
It can be used for either. He used the soap to clean off the dirt. You need to soap the dirty parts to get them clean.
The word is likely one of these:ground - (adjective) chopped finely (noun) dirt, surfacegroaned - (verb) made a groan, moan, or similar sound
dirt. dirt. dirt......... and dirt
As a verb: I was able to contact the customer service representative using the 800 number. As a noun: Dirt can get into the switch so an electrical contact can't be made.
dirt 3
A hunk of dirt is just that, a hunk of dirt.
wash your dirt, and it becomes clean dirt
No, Dirt 3 is better than Dirt 1.
dirt