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- in the gutter
in the gutter
*in the gutter
Fig. [of a person] in a low state; poor and homeless. (*Typically: be ~; fall [into] ~; put some-one [into] ~.) You had better straighten out your life, or you'll end in the gutter. His bad habits put him into the gutter.
in the gutter
Appropriate to or from a squalid, degraded condition. For example, The language in that book belongs in the gutter. An antonym, out of the gutter, means "away from vulgarity or sordidness," as in That joke was quite innocent; get your mind out of the gutter. This idiom uses gutter in the sense of "a conduit for filthy waste." [Mid-1800s]
Common Names:
Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
Hemingr | | - | Ancient Scandinavian |
Vlasiy | | - | Russian |
Dejen | | - | Eastern African, Amharic |
Azhar | | - | Arabic, Urdu |
Filomena | | fee-lo-ME-nah (Italian) | Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch |
Tammaro | | - | Italian |