English edit

Verb edit

guts out (third-person singular simple present gutses out, present participle gutsing out, simple past and past participle gutsed out)

  1. (transitive, chiefly sports) To persevere through; to complete in spite of pain, etc.
    • 1998 May 26, S Smith1701, “Next Year? Why wait.”, in alt.sports.baseball.calif-angels[1] (Usenet):
      Again, name one. Every one of them is playing as hard as they can -- unless you can cite any hard evidence to the contrary. Or perhaps you haven't noticed that Tim Salmon is playing with a badly injured foot. Or how about Jim Edmonds playing with two bad knees last year. Or Jack McDowell gutsing out five innings last week with a bad elbow.
    • 2007, John David, Morituri: Sixth and Final Episode of Enemies of Society, AuthorHouse UK, page 100,
      Latty blinked. Another odd question from her odd roommate. Latty sort of liked Rowan, and the girl had gutsed out her initiation, but that Shanghai valley must have been utterly freako.
    • 2009 January 31, Michael Horan, “Andrew McDonald strikes early for Victoria”, in Herald Sun[2], archived from the original on 1 February 2009:
      "It was a bit like yesterday, we really gutsed it out and put ourselves well and truly back into a game where we can create a six-point scenario," he said.