What is a dirt farmer

Translate dirt farmer into Spanish

North American
  • A farmer who ekes out a living from a farm on poor land, typically without the help of hired labour.

    ‘many migrated to become poor dirt farmers in North Carolina’

    • ‘I've been a dirt farmer all my life.’
    • ‘He didn't argue with me a bit when I told him I thought one of his best roles was the dirt farmer, Willie Crawford, in the 1956 Robert Wagner war movie ‘Between Heaven and Hell.’’
    • ‘Late developer is a description that might sit snugly on 42-year-old Knight's shoulders, but this does not devalue the New Jersey man's articulation of the dirt farmer's mentality in his adopted state of Kentucky.’
    • ‘But, I tell you, mine are going to be really valuable someday because I'm carving real dirt farmers, Minnesota dirt farmers, and these people are disappearing from Minnesota.’
    • ‘However, ‘there were no dirt farmers or poor artisans attending the convention to proffer an opposing viewpoint.’’
    • ‘Through most of its history, the Democratic Party was the natural home of hard-pressed, unglamorous America - manual workers, dirt farmers, small businessmen just a bad month away from bankruptcy court.’
    • ‘There's no dirt under Veneman's fingernails, for she's spent her career in Washington and Sacramento, pushing for free-trade and biotech policies that rip off and displace our nation's real dirt farmers.’
    • ‘Like most of the gentlemen of his class, Carter despised the hurly-burly of an electoral system that forced him to appeal for the votes of dirt farmers, whom he held in utter contempt.’
    • ‘She came of better stock than Texas dirt farmers, or so she thought.’
    • ‘Belonging mostly to the gentry, they had no intention of becoming dirt farmers or laborers in America.’
    • ‘Given this, the plight of the dirt farmers who were forced to evacuate their 40 acres in the Dirt Bowl in Oklahoma of the 1930s was doubly tragic.’
    • ‘I mean, even us dirt farmers could have told you that more demand for electricity and no new generating plants would make the price go up.’

[count] US, informal

: a poor farmer who lives by farming the land usually without the help of paid workers

A farmer who does all the work on his or her property.

(informal) A farmer who works his or her own land.

A subsistence farmer; a farmer with no hired hands.

A farmer who is too poor to use, or unable to use, irrigation.

An unproductive farmer, for whatever reason.

While the farmers in the valley grew many fruits and vegetables, the rocky slopes above made the growers up there little more than dirt farmers.Or:

Prior to widespread irrigation, prairie agriculture in North America was mainly dirt farming.

by Word Worm September 10, 2009

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the worst job in the world you spend your whole day kicking the floor so dust comes up and you collect and you are paid 1p per kilogram.

'' i work on a dirtfarm all day''

by gangsta boi August 16, 2005

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This shows grade level based on the word's complexity.

a farmer who works on the soil, distinguished from one who operates a farm with hired hands or tenants.

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An Americanism dating back to 1920–25

dirt bike, dirt-cheap, dirt dauber, dirt-eating, dirt farm, dirt farmer, dirt fishing, dirt poor, dirt road, dirty, dirty bomb

Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2022

  • Turns out that wool regulates temperature, repels water, wicks away moisture, and resists stains and dirt.

  • “They are innocent of the charges leveled against them,” a statement issued by Farmer, who also represents the accused, said.

  • They slapped and punched him, and when he fell, dragged him through the dirt.

    Inside the CIA’s Sadistic Dungeon|Tim Mak|December 9, 2014|DAILY BEAST

  • In one case a detainee was dragged naked along the dirt floor.

    Inside the CIA’s Sadistic Dungeon|Tim Mak|December 9, 2014|DAILY BEAST

  • And Madusa had spent time on motorcycles, dirt bikes and four wheelers, among other rides.

  • E was an Esquire, with pride on his brow; F was a Farmer, and followed the plough.

  • And if he was worried about Farmer Green's cat, why didn't he dig a hole for himself at once, and get out of harm's way?

    The Tale of Grandfather Mole|Arthur Scott Bailey

  • He walked first to one side, and then the other, rooting in the dirt with his funny, rubbery nose.

    Squinty the Comical Pig|Richard Barnum

  • At that Farmer Green's cat began to run up and down between the rows of vegetables.

    The Tale of Grandfather Mole|Arthur Scott Bailey

  • Farmer Green's cat had never liked Mr. Crow, for no particular reason.

    The Tale of Grandfather Mole|Arthur Scott Bailey

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