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Webster 1913 Edition


Guttle

Gut′tle

,
Verb.
T.
&
I.
[From
Gut
,
Noun.
]
To put into the gut; to swallow greedily; to gorge; to gormandize.
[Obs.]
L’Estrange.
Dryden.

Webster 1828 Edition


Guttle

GUT'TLE

,
Verb.
T.
To swallow. [Not used.]

GUT'TLE

,
Verb.
I.
To swallow greedily. [Not used.]

Definition 2024


guttle

guttle

English

Verb

guttle (third-person singular simple present guttles, present participle guttling, simple past and past participle guttled)

  1. To put into the gut; to eat voraciously; to swallow greedily; to gorge, gormandize.
    • c. 1692, Dryden Translations From Persius, The Sixth Satire of Pursius:
      His jolly brother, opposite in sense, / Laughs at his thrift; and lavish of expence / Quaffs, crams, and guttles, in his own defence.
    • 1890s, Poverty Knock:
      I know I can guttle, when I hear my shuttle, go poverty, poverty knock.
  2. To swallow.
    • 1692 Sir Roger L'Estrange (1616-1704) Fables Of Aesop And Other Eminent Mythologists:
      The fool spit in his porridge, to try if they'd hiss : they did not hiss, and so he guttled them up, and scalded his chops
  3. (Britain, dialectal, Northern England) To make a bubbling sound
  4. (Britain, dialectal, Scotland) To remove the guts from; eviscerate

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