تعريف gutted في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- deeply disappointed
So there I was feeling totally gutted by the whole ghastly business.
- Past participle of to gut
In order to progress, we need to wait until the next period! I'm gutted! Been given some tablets to help accelerate this and should get it within 7-10 days.
- Simple past tense and past participle of gut
Many believed this provision gutted the new law, as Lowry appointed three very conservative men to the body.
- With the most important parts destroyed (often by fire), removed or rendered useless
Recognizing by late April that the new law was gutted beyond repair, the Michigan State Temperance Society urged prohibitionists to interrogate every every political candidate on this issue and to vote only for those who would publicly pledge to support the passage and enforcement of law.
- eviscerated
He was leaning forward, head down, taking one deliberate step after another, both arms behind, dragging his gutted buck by its barely forked antlers.
- Having a gut or guts
Uh, I'm having a problem mumbled the soggy-gutted bear as he suddenly found himself wedged between two large Austrian women.
- past of gut
- If you are gutted, you feel extremely disappointed or depressed about something that has happened. Birmingham City supporters will be absolutely gutted if he leaves the club
- {s} eviscerated; with the insides taken out; (British Slang) extremely disappointed or upset
- gutted by fire
- destroyed by fire, burnt out
- GUT
- Grand unification theory
- gut
- The alimentary canal, especially the intestine; innards
- gut
- To remove or destroy the most important parts of
Congress gutted the welfare bill.
- gut
- The abdomen of a person, especially one that is enlarged
beer gut.
- gut
- The intestines of an animal used to make strings of a tennis racket or violin, etc
- gut
- Made of gut, e.g., a violin with gut strings
- gut
- empty completely; destroy the inside of; "Gut the building"
- gut
- {v} to take out the guts, draw, plunder
- gut
- {n} the inward passage of food, gluttony, appetite
- gut
- To take out the bowels from; to eviscerate
- gut
- The alimentary canal A term used when describing fish larvae
- gut
- bowels; entrails
- gut
- To eviscerate
- gut
- the intestines
- gut
- A narrow passage of water; as, the Gut of Canso
- gut
- remove the guts of; "gut the sheep" empty completely; destroy the inside of; "Gut the building
- gut
- {i} intestines, alimentary canal; bowels, entrails; inner parts, contents of anything; sinew (used for violin strings, tennis rackets, etc.)
- gut
- Guts is the will and courage to do something which is difficult or unpleasant, or which might have unpleasant results. The new Chancellor has the guts to push through unpopular tax increases
- gut
- Gut is string made from part of the stomach of an animal. Traditionally, it is used to make the strings of sports rackets or musical instruments such as violins. see also gutted
- gut
- the part of the alimentary canal between the stomach and the anus
- gut
- emphasis If you say that you are working your guts out or slogging your guts out, you are emphasizing that you are working as hard as you can. Most have worked their guts out and made sacrifices. grand unified theory
- gut
- emphasis If you hate someone's guts, you dislike them very much indeed. We hate each other's guts
- gut
- (1) A narrow passage such as a STRAIT or INLET (2) A CHANNEL in otherwise SHALLOW WATER, generally formed by water in motion
- gut
- a strong cord made from the intestines of sheep and used in surgery
- gut
- The gut is the tube inside the body of a person or animal through which food passes while it is being digested
- gut
- of a sheep, used for various purposes
- gut
- A person's or animal's guts are all the organs inside them. By the time they finish, the crewmen are standing ankle-deep in fish guts
- gut
- Achronym for grand unified theory [F88] GUTs See grand unified theories [LB90] gyrofrequency The frequency with which an electron or other charged particle executes spiral gyrations in moving across a magnetic field [H76] gyrosynchrotron radiation Radiation emitted by mildly relativistic electrons [H76] This page is maintained by Cren Frayer Last modified: 2-Mar-99 Cren Frayer cd@ipac caltech edu -->
- gut
- An intenstine; a bowel; the whole alimentary canal; the enteron; pl
- gut
- {f} disembowel, eviscerate; remove the internal contents of; destroy the inside of
- gut
- One of the prepared entrails of an animal, esp
- gut
- empty completely; destroy the inside of; "Gut the building
- gut
- Instinctive, e.g., a gut reaction
- gut
- The sac of silk taken from a silkworm (when ready to spin its cocoon), for the purpose of drawing it out into a thread
- gut
- The river s channel is often referred to as the "gut"
- gut
- A gut feeling is based on instinct or emotion rather than reason. Let's have your gut reaction to the facts as we know them
- gut
- To gut a building means to destroy the inside of it so that only its outside walls remain. Over the weekend, a firebomb gutted a building where 60 people lived A factory stands gutted and deserted
- gut
- the best place to hit your opponent with a stone-hard *smash
- gut
- You can refer to someone's stomach as their gut, especially when it is very large and sticks out. His gut sagged out over his belt. see also beer gut
- gut
- To plunder of contents; to destroy or remove the interior or contents of; as, a mob gutted the house
- gut
- When someone guts a dead animal or fish, they prepare it for cooking by removing all the organs from inside it. It is not always necessary to gut the fish prior to freezing
- gut
- remove the guts of; "gut the sheep"
- gut
- -Slang for "Line Hose"
- gut
- This, when dry, is exceedingly strong, and is used as the snood of a fish line