Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
And a face like a dirt farmer too, she'd thought.
"How comes a poor dirt farmer to have so fine a horse?"
"My parents, who had paid for four years of college, saw me as a dirt farmer.
"I used to be a dirt farmer back on Earth," he explained.
He knew soil; he'd grown up as a dirt farmer, after all.
"Gene, after all, grew up as a dirt farmer to become one of the wealthiest people in America."
"I took a lesson from these dirt farmers," Rivas said.
George Hearst had started life as a Missouri dirt farmer.
A few dirt farmers raised beans, and piled their refuse into large heaps.
That's the redneck dirt farmer, not the plantation owner.
They'd all have to turn dirt farmer!
"How much resistance do you think even a large number of dirt farmers or sheepherders would offer such brigands?"
The Barnettes were nothing but poor dirt farmers, most of them living worse than slaves.
Tom Hanna was a red dirt farmer in the Oklahoma panhandle.
My grandfather was a dirt farmer and my father was a civil servant.
That ignorant dirt farmer can't possibly know the first thing about divining."
They were nothing but a bunch of dirt farmers armed with blasters they stole from me.
After all, it had been self-defense--even dirt farmers from Missouri could understand that.
The Nebraska dirt farmers seldom saw $25 in cold cash money all in one piece.
The McCoys moved to California and became dirt farmers.
Dirt farmer is an American colloquial term for a practical farmer, or one who farms his own land.
I'm a negotiator, not a dirt farmer.
The grower was a dirt farmer.
One of 15 children of South Carolina dirt farmers, he started working at the age of 7, helping his father with the family's still.
"Thought you were a dirt farmer.