gutted

Etymology

From Middle English gutted, gotted, equivalent to gut + -ed.

adj

  1. (not comparable) Eviscerated.
    The exports, on the whole, in 1815, exceeded those of 1816; but the gutted herrings exported in the latter year exceeded those of the former by 12606½ barrels 1829, Thomas Curtis, editor, The London encyclopaedia, or, Universal dictionary of science, art, literature, and practical mechanics, by the orig. ed. of the Encyclopaedia metropolitana
    He was leaning forward, head down, taking one deliberate step after another, both arms behind, dragging his gutted buck by its barely forked antlers. 2006, John Durand, Behind Enemy Lines: A Memoir
  2. With the most important parts destroyed (often by fire), removed or rendered useless.
    (referring to the practice of newspapers removing all intermediate vowels from the names of people about whom they were making potentially libelous statements, as eg Fl-r-o, compare 1714 cite of past participle, below) For he to keep him from the vapours, /Subscribed at Hookham's, saw the papers; /Was deep in poet's-corner wit; /Knew what was in italics writ; /Explain'd fictitious names at will, /Each gutted syllable cou'd fill; /There oft, in paragraphs, his name /Gave symptom sweet of growing fame. 1786, Hannah More, Florio read in The Works of Hannah More, in Four Volumes: Including Several Pieces Never Before Published, Vol. I. (1803)
    Viasma on the other hand, presented as dismal a scene as we had any where witnessed. Nearly all the large houses were gutted and burnt. 1819, John Thomas James, Journal of a Tour in Germany, Sweden, Russia, Poland in 1813-14
    1841, "An intelligent gentleman of Berwick" quoted in Charles Ellms, The Tragedy of the Seas; Or, Sorrow on the Ocean, Lake, and River, from Shipwreck, Plague, Fire and Famine We have this day paid a visit to the wreck, which is lying in much the same state that it was, only somewhat more gutted by the occasional dashing of the billows amongst its timber and planks.
    The markets will be more gutted than usual. 1998, Dorothy U. Seyler, Read, Reason, Write
    The gutted city of Bremen, where nothing remained standing in its central area except a few walls in “crazy patterns”, and “the smell of death” from thousands of people buried in the wreckage “hung heavy in the air”. 2006, Robert Dallek, Lone Star Rising: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1908-1960
    2006, John W. Quist, An Occasionally Dry State Surrounded by Water: Temperance and Prohibition in Antebellum Michigan read in Paul Finkelman, Martin Hershock (eds), History of Michigan Law 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 [another] law".
  3. (chiefly archaic) Having a gut or guts.
    Having spoke thus, she took the ugliest of her monsters, full gutted from her spleen, and flung it invisibly into his mouth, which, flying straight up into his head, squeezed out his eye-balls, gave him a distorted look, and half overturned his brain. 1704, Jonathan Swift, A Full and True Account of the Battle Fought last Friday Between the Antient and the Modern Books in St James's Library read in John Hawkesworth The Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin, accurately revised In Twelve Volumes, Adorned with Copper-Plates; with Some Account of the Author's Life, and Notes Historical and Explanatory (1755)
    He could tell she wanted to cry. "We've made a pact that we are going to try to get into men's basketball, and we're not going to do any of this crying stuff," he reminded her, and she gutted it out. 2006, Karra Porter, Mad Seasons: The Story of the First Women's Professional Basketball League, 1978-1981
    "Uh, I'm having a problem " mumbled the soggy-gutted bear as he suddenly found himself wedged between two large Austrian women. 2006, Duane K. Maddy, (Please provide the book title or journal name)
  4. (slang) Deeply disappointed or crushed, as by defeat, failure, or loss; let down.
    The whole platoon had felt gutted, an attitude rarely reflected in press reporters. 1986, Keith William Nolan, Into Laos: Dewey Canyon II/Lam Son 719 ; Vietnam 1971
    Throughout the book he runs the whole gamut of emotion from ‘chuffed' to ‘gutted', while being on the whole (surprisingly, for a fabulously gifted millionaire) more gutted than chuffed, and he cheerfully confesses to a short temper. 2001, Terry Eagleton, Figures of Dissent: Critical Essays on Fish, Spivak, Zizek and Others
    2004, "Bobbins", quoted in Justine Roberts, Mums on Pregnancy: Trade Secrets from the Real Experts The thing I was most gutted about was that I had planned to finish knitting a patchwork cot blanket. It never did get finished.
    The guard entered the room and before I knew it Sarah had left, I felt gutted and a broken man. 2006, Karon Louise Mannerstedt, Twice
    So there I was feeling totally gutted by the whole ghastly business. 2006, Paul Mitch, Life on the Rock and Roll: Dole
    He was really gutted by his father's death. 2021-02-04, Hania Allen, The Ice Hotel: a gripping Scandi-noir thriller, Constable

verb

  1. simple past and past participle of gut

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