Submitted Surnames with "dirt" in Meaning

This is a list of submitted surnames in which the meaning contains the keyword dirt.
usage
meaning
See Also
dirt meaning
Submitted names are contributed by users of this website. The accuracy of these name definitions cannot be guaranteed.
Hijikata Japanese
From 泥 (hiji) meaning "mud, mire," more often written as 土, from tsuchi meaning "earth, soil, dirt, mud," and 方 (kata) meaning "direction, way" or, more rarely, 片 (kata) meaning "one (of a pair); incomplete, fragmentary" (cognate with 方).... [more]
Loia Italian
Most likely a variant of Aloia. May alternately be related to Italian loggia "atrium, open-roofed gallery", Greek λεώς (leos) "the people", or Tuscan loia "dirt, filth on clothes or skin", perhaps a nickname for someone with a profession that often made them dirty, such as mining.
Muld Estonian
Muld is an Estonian surname meaning "soil" or "dirt".
Noji Japanese
From Japanese 野 (no) meaning "field, wilderness" and 地 (ji) meaning "earth, land, dirt".
Quade Irish, German
As an Irish surname, it is a variant of Quaid.... [more]
Yarbrough English
Habitational name derived from Yarborough or Yarburgh in Lincolnshire, England, both composed of Old English eorþe "earth, ground, dirt" and burg "fortress, citadel, stronghold".