Dirt

This time we are looking on the crossword clue for: Dirt.
it’s A 4 letters crossword puzzle definition. See the possibilities below.

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Possible Answers: SCHMUTZ, INFO, SOIL, SMUT, INO, GRIME, GOSSIP, PORNO, FILTH, INSIDEINFO.

Last seen on: –The Atlantic Wednesday, 27 March 2024 Crossword Answers
Daily Crossword Club Crossword Wednesday, April 5, 2023
NY Times Crossword 28 Feb 23, Tuesday
NY Times Crossword 20 Mar 21, Saturday
Newsday.com Crossword – Jun 25 2020
Daily Celebrity Crossword – 5/27/19 Movie Monday
The Washington Post Crossword – August 10 2018
-Metro Crossword November 25 2017

Random information on the term “INFO”:

Robert Todd Carroll (May 18, 1945 – August 25, 2016) was an American writer and academic. Carroll is best known for his contributions in the field of skepticism; he achieved notability by publishing The Skeptic’s Dictionary online in 1994. He was elected a fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry in 2010. He described himself as a naturalist, an atheist, a materialist, a metaphysical libertarian, and a positivist.

His published books include Becoming a Critical Thinker; The Skeptic’s Dictionary; The Skeptic’s Dictionary for Kids; The Critical Thinker’s Dictionary; Unnatural Acts: Critical Thinking, Skepticism, and Science Exposed!; The Commonsense Philosophy of Religion of Edward Stillingfleet; Student Success Guide: Writing Skills and Student Success Guide: Reading Skills.

He was a professor of philosophy at Sacramento City College from 1977 until his retirement in 2007.

Carroll was born in Joliet, Illinois on May 18, 1945. His father worked in a coal processing plant. The family moved to San Diego in 1954 where Carroll grew up. He describes his early years in Ocean Beach as an ideal childhood. He was raised Catholic.

INFO on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “INO”:

I-No (Japanese: イノ?, Hepburn: Ino) is a Character Arc System Works’s Guilty Gear video game series. She first appeared in the 2002 video game Guilty Gear X2 as a boss. In the series, I-No is a servant of That Man—the series’ main antagonist. She fights with an electric guitar, and she also wears a pointed witch’s hat that can fire projectiles.

Video game reviewers have commented on her sex appeal, with some of them also remarking her winning pose as well as her clothes and electric guitar. Her fighting abilities and the difficulty to defeat her as a boss have also been noted by critics.

I-No was first introduced in the third installment of the series, Guilty Gear X2 (2002), where she appears as the primary antagonist and final boss. She carries with her an electric guitar nicknamed Marlene (マレーネ?, Marēne) that she uses to fight both using it as a bludgeon and playing it to create deadly sonic waves, and she also fights with her hat that can shoot projectiles out of a secret hole. I-No is one of That Man’s servants, and she appears in every character’s storyline, manipulating them against each other—for example, she gives fake bounty lists with the name of the people her master wants to kill, consisting entirely of other cast members, to Jam Kuradoberi and Bridget.

INO on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “FILTH”:

Filth is a 1998 novel by Scottish writer Irvine Welsh. A sequel, Crime, was published in 2008. It was adapted into a 2013 film of the same name, directed by Jon S. Baird with James McAvoy in the lead role.

Bruce Robertson is a detective sergeant serving in Edinburgh’s “Lothian Constabulary”. Robertson is a Machiavellian, intensely misanthropic man who spends his time indulging in cocaine and alcohol abuse, sexually abusive relationships, compulsive gorging on junk food, and, most of all, his penchant for “the games” – Bruce’s euphemism for the myriad foul plots he hatches directed at workmates. He is able to pander to all of his vices during his annual holidays in Amsterdam.

The novel begins by introducing the murder of Efan Wurie, a case Bruce has been assigned. The plot has little to do with the actual crime; instead, the novel traces Bruce throughout his life, told in a first-person, stream-of-consciousness style. Through narrative devices such as the tapeworm he acquires, the reader explores the facets of Bruce’s personality and learns about his past, as well as the various tedious police routines Bruce absconds from, his often-backfiring sexual endeavours, and his various short- and long-term schemes and plots against his colleagues (ultimately in order to raise his chances of gaining the hoped-for promotion to detective inspector). Apart from the general malevolent scheming, along the way Bruce Robertson also seeks to satisfy his cravings for violence, drugs, sex, and pornography whilst happily voicing his racism, anti-Catholic sectarianism, and misogyny, all the while pining for his ex-wife.

FILTH on Wikipedia