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Discover LudwigThe phrase "absolute dirt" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is extremely dirty or of very low quality, often in a figurative sense.
Example: "The car was in absolute dirt after the off-road trip, covered in mud and grime."
Alternatives: "complete mess" or "utter filth".
Exact(3)
"It was the anthropologist Mary Douglas who said: 'There is no such thing as absolute dirt.
Referring to Douglas' definition of dirt as 'matter out of place', there is no absolute dirt and, 'Eliminating it is not a negative movement, but a positive effort to organize the environment,' (Douglas 1966 2).
Dear God, April Fools' Day is the absolute dirt worst, isn't it?
Similar(57)
What if you could switch on the fly between the "absolute theatrical," with dirt and old effects intact, the "restored theatrical," with all the clarification, rebalancing, and effects fixes in, and the "enhanced" version, with new effects, scenes, and so on?
The tabloids have achieved this by ponying up for sources (an absolute taboo in traditional journalistic ethics), digging up all the dirt possible, and then slapping on a sensational, truth-bending headline.
Of course, the plows do come, cars do drive, and eventually some of it turns a bit brownish with dirt, but we still have those few hours of absolute beauty.
Dirt Rally is packed with these moments because it demands absolute engagement from its drivers.
(Aside) Dirt?
Ha! Dirt.
Pay dirt!
Dirt everywhere.
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