gutty
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ʌti
Etymology 1
From goutte + -y, or anglicization of (Old or Middle French) goutté, ultimately from Latin gutta (“drop (of a liquid)”) (also the ultimate source of English goutte and French goutte). Compare guttated.
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Azure, gutty d'eau (semé of gouttes argent), borne by Thomas Winterbottom, and by Sumiainen, Finland.
Adjective
Noun
gutty (plural gutties)
- One who works in a slaughterhouse cutting out the internal organs.
- 1990, New Zealand Industrial Law Reports:
- Mr Donaldson continued to work during the season as a gutty in the beefhouse at the Lorneville plant, notwithstanding a high level of pain and/or discomfort which he persistently experienced from his elbow disorder.
Etymology 3
Perhaps from gutter, or guttersnipe.[1] Or possibly from Irish gaotaire (“a windbag, someone who talks too much”).[2]
Noun
gutty (plural gutties)
Adjective
gutty (not comparable)
- (slang) Made of gutta-percha.
- 2013, Alfie Ward, Fairways! What Fairways?, page 182:
- I still had in my possession thirteen sets of hickories and a good stock of gutty golf balls, […]
Related terms
References
- “gutty”, in Collins English Dictionary, HarperCollins Publishers, 2019 January 29 (last accessed)
- Terence Patrick Dolan (1998) A Dictionary of Hiberno-English, Gill & Macmillan, →ISBN, page 135
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