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come a gutser

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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From falling on ones gut, or belly.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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come a gutser (third-person singular simple present comes a gutser, present participle coming a gutser, simple past came a gutser, past participle come a gutser)

  1. (Australia, New Zealand, slang) To do a belly flop; to fall flat on one's face.
    • 1964, Ron Helmer, Stag Party, page 82:
      Slippery as a butcher's apron it is, and I comes a gutser twice before I gets down to the stag.
    • 2001, Anita Bell, Crystal Coffin, →ISBN, page 33:
      You took off up Main Street past the church, jumped the gutter, two cars and a four-foot fence, and finally come a gutser in the gully below the cop station.
    • 2012, A. Bertram Chandler, Ride the Star Winds, →ISBN:
      “Come off it, skipper. There's nobody to miss us if this scow comes a gutser. We're expendable, even more so than the average Rim Runner officer. And that's saying plenty.”
    • 2013, Glyn Parry, Sad Boys, →ISBN:
      Until he tripped again and came a gutser. This time he stayed down.
  2. (Australia, New Zealand, slang) To fail miserably; to make a huge mistake; to fall flat on one's face.
    • 1919, C. Hampton Thorp, A Handful of Ausseys, page 288:
      Ole Fritz keeps on tryin' ter feel our possies at night with small patrols, an' they tried ter raid us two nights ago, but came a gutser, 'coz we hopped out an' met 'em, an' they put their 'ands up.
    • 1982, New Zealand Parliament House of Representatives, Parliamentary Debates - Volume 443, page 439:
      The Government has come a gutser there, and it will come a gutser in the health area when it tries to put the user-pays principle in operation.
    • 2011, Alan Ramsay, A Matter of Opinion, →ISBN, page 90:
      Well, where you all come a gutser is, over here, we think we're born to rule YOU.
    • 2016, Art Collins, In The Outback, →ISBN:
      Unless we come a gutser, we won't get near them.
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