Gut : noun The Gut are guts (and stomachs) of ruminants prepared to be consumed.
Bowels. To take, to seize with the guts: to move strongly (to upset, to grip).
Actor who plays with his guts, with what he has deepest; give everything for his role.
It would hurt (me) guts : I highly doubt it.
Have guts: have courage, ignore a situation, recommendations,
alerts or danger to move forward, even if it is lost in advance.
He lacks guts: courage.
Feel in the guts: deep inside.
Get out your guts: go to the end of your strength.
Tear your guts out: give everything you have in your stomach.
To have the Republican guts: to be nationalist.
To feel his guts turn over: to have pain in the heart, in the belly.
A thousand million guts! : interjection.
Name of a tripe! : interjection.
Tripe: badly made or too full throat; deformed nipples, elastic like a piece of rubber (allusion to the piece of tripe that the tripe makers call the cap: it is the belly).
To have the guts in the air: to have been disembowelled.
Make / puke tripe and guts: to throw up.
Put (someone's) guts in sun / in the air: to disembowel it.
Quote from the American writer Charles Bukowski (1920-1994) in Hollywood : “The secret was in physical condition. Talent and guts were essential, but without form, they were useless ”.
Quote from the Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez (1917-2014): “I sat down to continue the article that I had left in the works the day before. I finished it in one go in less than two hours and I had to wring the necks of the muses to tear it out of my guts without anyone noticing my tears. in Memory of my sad whores (2004)
Quote from the Chilean writer Luis Sepúlveda (1949-2020): “The old man repressed his urge to pull the trigger. He imagined the double shock piercing the enormous belly, tearing off part of the back and making the guts gush out. " in the Old man who read romance novels (1988)