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101 hate s.o.'s guts
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102 to cough one's guts up
reventar tosiendo -
103 to hate somebody's guts
odiar a alguien a muerte, no poder ni ver a alguien -
104 to have somebody's guts for garters
sacarle las tripas a alguienEnglish-spanish dictionary > to have somebody's guts for garters
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105 to sweat one's guts out
echar los bofes -
106 to work/slog one's guts out
to work/slog one's guts outechar los bofes -
107 Tube of guts
Tube of gutssl pessoa gorda e repulsiva. -
108 the book has no guts in it
the book has no guts in itsl o livro não tem graça. -
109 to hate someone’s guts
to hate someone’s gutsodiar, detestar alguém. -
110 to spill one’s guts
to spill one’s gutscontar tudo, ser ingênuo. -
111 to sweat one’s guts out
to sweat one’s guts outtrabalhar muito, especialmente com esforço físico. -
112 wringing of the guts
wringing of the gutsdor de barriga, cólica intestinal. -
113 fat-guts
fat-guts[´fæt¸gʌts] n грубо дебелак, шишко, шопар. -
114 wimp-guts
wimp-guts[´wimp¸gʌts] sl = wimp I. -
115 hate someone's guts
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116 it has no guts in it
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117 sweat/work one's guts out
sweat/work one's guts out -
118 they hate each other's guts
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119 misery-guts
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120 misery-guts
См. также в других словарях:
guts — [ gʌts ] noun plural INFORMAL * 1. ) the quality of being brave and determined: That s what you need to be a referee, guts. have the guts to do something: She had the guts to decide what she wanted and go for it. it takes guts to do something: It … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
guts´i|ly — guts|y «GUHT see», adjective, guts|i|er, guts|i|est. Slang. 1. full of guts: »Figurative. a gutsy fighter. 2. Figurative. full of vitality; … Useful english dictionary
guts|y — «GUHT see», adjective, guts|i|er, guts|i|est. Slang. 1. full of guts: »Figurative. a gutsy fighter. 2. Figurative. full of vitality; … Useful english dictionary
guts — informal courage and determination. → gut guts informal used in names attributing negative characteristics: → gut guts entrails that have been removed or exposed. → gut guts the internal parts or essence of something. → gut … English new terms dictionary
guts — meaning ‘courage or determination’, is more forceful and less neutral than either of these words. It is now only slightly informal, although it is more so in idiomatic expressions such as hate a person s guts and work one s guts out (in which… … Modern English usage
Guts — (auf deutsch so viel wie Mumm) ist ein Mannschaftssport, der mit einer 125 g schweren Frisbee gespielt wird. Zwei Mannschaften zu je fünf Spielern stehen sich in paralleler Aufstellung gegenüber. Der Abstand zwischen den Mannschaften beträgt … Deutsch Wikipedia
guts — spirit, courage, 1893, figurative plural of GUT (Cf. gut). The idea of the bowels as the seat of the spirit goes back to at least mid 14c … Etymology dictionary
guts — [n] nerve, boldness audacity, backbone*, courage, daring, dauntlessness, effrontery, forcefulness, fortitude, grit*, hardihood, heart*, intestinal fortitude*, mettle, moxie*, pluck, resolution, sand*, spine*, spirit, spunk*, willpower; concepts… … New thesaurus
guts — /gʌts / (say guts) Colloquial –plural noun (often construed as singular) 1. the bowels or entrails. 2. the stomach or abdomen. 3. courage; stamina; endurance: to have guts. 4. essential information: the guts of the matter. 5. essential parts or… …
guts */ — UK [ɡʌts] / US noun [plural] informal 1) the quality of being brave and determined That s what you need to be a referee – guts. have the guts to do something: She had the guts to go for what she wanted. it takes guts to do something: It takes a… … English dictionary
guts — [gats] 1. n. courage; bravado. □ Man, she’s got guts! □ It takes guts to do something like that. 2. n. the belly; the intestines. □ Ted poked Frank right in the guts. □ … Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions