gullet

gullet
/gul"it/, n.
1. the esophagus.
2. the throat or pharynx.
3. a channel for water.
4. a gully or ravine.
5. a preparatory cut in an excavation.
6. a concavity between two sawteeth, joining them at their bases.
v.t.
7. to form a concavity at the base of (a sawtooth).
[1350-1400; ME golet < OF goulet L gula throat; see -ET]

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • gullet — c.1300 (as a surname), from O.Fr. golet neck (of a bottle); gutter; bay, creek, dim. of gole throat, neck (Mod.Fr. guele), from L. gula throat, also appetite, from PIE root *gwele swallow (Cf. L. gluttire to gulp down, devour, O.E. ceole throat …   Etymology dictionary

  • gullet — [gul′ət] n. [ME golet < OFr goulet, throat, narrow passage, dim. of goule < L gula, throat < IE base * gel , to swallow > OE ceole, Ger kehle, throat] 1. the tube leading from the mouth to the stomach; esophagus 2. the throat or neck… …   English World dictionary

  • Gullet — Gul let, n. [OE. golet, OF. Goulet, dim. of gole, goule, throat, F. gueule, L. gula; perh. akin to Skr. gula, G. kenle; cf. F. goulet the neck of a bottle, goulotte channel gutter. Cf. {Gules}, {Gully}.] 1. (Anat.) The tube by which food and… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • gullet — ► NOUN ▪ the passage by which food passes from the mouth to the stomach; the oesophagus. ORIGIN Old French goulet little throat …   English terms dictionary

  • gullet — [14] Latin gula meant ‘throat’. It was a descendant of Indo European *gel ‘swallow’, which also produced German kehle ‘throat’ and English glut and glutton. Gula passed into Old French as gole or goule (whence modern French gueule ‘mouth’), where …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • gullet — UK [ˈɡʌlɪt] / US [ˈɡʌlət] noun [countable] Word forms gullet : singular gullet plural gullets the oesophagus …   English dictionary

  • gullet — [14] Latin gula meant ‘throat’. It was a descendant of Indo European *gel ‘swallow’, which also produced German kehle ‘throat’ and English glut and glutton. Gula passed into Old French as gole or goule (whence modern French gueule ‘mouth’), where …   Word origins

  • gullet — n. [L. gula, gullet] The esophagus …   Dictionary of invertebrate zoology

  • gullet — [[t]gʌ̱lɪt[/t]] gullets N COUNT Your gullet is the tube which goes from your mouth to your stomach …   English dictionary

  • gullet — noun the bird s gullet Syn: esophagus, throat, maw, pharynx; crop, craw; archaic throttle, gorge …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • gullet worm — noun : a nematode worm infesting the gullet; especially : any of various worms (as Gongylonema pulchrum or Syngamus laryngeus) that invade the epithelial lining of the esophagus of ruminants …   Useful english dictionary

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