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gut English

Meaning gut meaning

What does gut mean?
Definitions in simple English

gut

A person's gut is their belly. That man has a large belly. He has a beer gut.

gut

If you gut something, you remove its internal organs. My grandpa can gut fish in less than a minute. If you gut something, you remove the important parts. Congress gutted the bill. The construction workers are gutting the building so they can rebuild the layout.

gut

(= intestine) the part of the alimentary canal between the stomach and the anus a narrow channel or strait empty completely; destroy the inside of Gut the building remove the guts of gut the sheep (= catgut) a strong cord made from the intestines of sheep and used in surgery

Synonyms gut synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as gut?

GUT English » English

grand unified theory

Topics gut topics

What do people use gut to talk about?

Conjugation gut conjugation

How do you conjugate gut?

gut · verb

Examples gut examples

How do I use gut in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Trust your gut.
You should trust your gut instinct.
Tom felt like he had been punched in the gut.
Tom showed Mary how to gut a fish.
I just have a gut feeling Tom is hiding something.
My gut tells me that Tom is lying.
They both wore the faces of someone who'd been smacked in the gut by a two-by-four.

Movie subtitles

Last night I was too hungry to sleep. and tonight, when I get the wrinkles out of my gut, they think up wiring duty.
It's just like me. Nothing in its gut.
You're about to bust a gut to know what I done, ain't you?
Gut the whole Spanish Main strip it and leave it like a. horse's skull on the desert.
You ain't no pinch gut.
He swindled you. as he lay at Satan Shoal to gut the cargo of a ship. he himself had wrecked!
Mr Candy. Ich hoffe, Sie werden sich gut unterhalten.
Nicht sehr gut.
If we go, you're going with us, fat gut.
Do you want me to gut you?
Seein' a man fighting'. fightin' with his soul and gut to hang on to this place.
Gut sprung, teeth gone.
Right in the gut, Mr Boot.
In the gut you'll get it.
I got a right to my opinion and it's my opinion that Mr. Sherlock Holmes was nothing more but an old herring gut.
An herring gut, and old herring gut.
We'll see whose a herring gut.
I don't understand. Not half you don't you old herring gut.
For this gut scraper. This puppet of people like myself.
But, it's like I told you, strictly for gates and gut-busters.
Fighting with his soul and gut to hang on to this place.
If you don't score in the first five minutes I'll rip out your gut and wrap it around your neck!
If I catch him, I'll bleed him like a chicken, gut him like a pig.
Riccardo, as usual, stares at his growing gut.
She'd bust a gut if she tried to make 6 knots.
I'm sorry you had to find me. Gut gemacht, Hans.
And you can keep your gut-rot stuff.
Well, I'll get it tomorrow or bust a gut.
I just hate to see a good guyget it in the gut.
He likes to whack me in the gut.
If anyone moves, even a muscle, this goes into his gut!
But she has stolen my money, I'll gut her for it!
And look where it got Robboe, a fat gut and lots of worry.
In your fat gut this time.
What's that, a gut feeling?

News and current affairs

Yet at the same time, the corporate sector lobbies aggressively to gut environmental regulations, slash corporate-tax rates, and avoid their own responsibility for ecological destruction.
America has now suffered around 30 shooting massacres over the past 30 years, including this year's deadly dozen; each is a gut-wrenching tragedy for many families.
If you are a woman watching, you feel in your gut that these women won't be window dressing.
Referendums are a measure of popular gut feelings, rather than considered opinion, and popular gut feelings are rarely liberal.
They weaken it by undermining our elected representatives, whose job is to exercise their good judgment rather than voice the gut feelings of an anxious, angry people.
They want to gut state power so that jackals like themselves can feed on the corpse.
Gut-wrenching images of unspeakable, indiscriminate violence against civilians have shocked the world.
There is rubble and the gut-wrenching smell of decaying corpses.
Often the choice depends less on a rational assessment of similarities and differences than on gut feelings, proclivities to optimism or pessimism, or political orientation.
After all, there certainly is a case to be made that an FTT has so much gut-level popular appeal that politically powerful financial interests could not block it.
Yet, despite these circumstances, one political party wants to gut tax revenues altogether, and the other is easily dragged along, against its better instincts, out of concern for keeping its rich contributors happy.
We must fight Islamic extremism, but not by tapping into the darkest gut feelings of the unthinking mob.
Italy has long had a large Communist Party, and the left may be in power again; but there is no gut antagonism to the freedoms that capitalism encourages.
Part of strong leadership is to trust your gut instincts.
But the closed-minded have a powerful gut appeal, and religion plays into it.
The US went to war in Iraq on the basis of Bush's gut instincts and religious convictions, not rigorous evidence.
Blood loss, causing anemia, is the result of thousands of worms chewing at the wall of the gut.
The problem that arises is that our gut moral feelings are poorly attuned to consequences.
Voters also have a gut instinct - usually, though not always, correct - that parties of the traditional left will tax and spend more, and that those of the right will do the opposite.
There is rubble and the gut-wrenching smell of decaying corpses. The rats have it good; the one I accidentally stepped upon was already fat.