GORGE vs GULLET: NOUN
- A narrow passage between steep rocky walls; a ravine or defile with precipitous sides.
- A feeling of disgust, indignation, resentment, or the like: from the sympathetic influence of such emotions, when extreme in degree, upon the muscles of the throat.
- The entrance into a bastion or other outwork of a fort. See cut under bastion.
- In masonry, a little channel or up-cut on the lower side of the coping, to keep the drip from reaching the wall; a throat.
- The groove in the circumference of a pulley.
- A pitcher of earthenware or stoneware. Also george.
- Synonyms Ravine, Defile. See valley.
- A cavetto or hollow molding.
- In architecture: The narrow part of the Tuscan and Roman Doric capitals, between the astragal above the shaft of the column and the echinus; the necking or hypophyge. It is found also in some provincial Greek Doric, as at Pæstum. See cut under column.
- The throat; the gullet; the canal by which food passes to the stomach.
- A defile between mountains.
- A jam; a mass which chokes up a passage: as, a gorge of logs in a river; an ice-gorge.
- The act of gorging; inordinate eating; a heavy meal: as, to indulge in a gorge after long abstinence.
- Hence —2. That which is swallowed or is provided for swallowing; the material of a meal.
- A fish-hook consisting of a straight or crescent-shaped piece of stone or bone sharpened at the ends and grooved or perforated in the center: used by primitive tribes.
- In angling, a bait intended to be swallowed by the fish to effect its capture: usually a minnow in which a double-barbed leaded fish-hook is embedded.
- The seam on the front of a coat or jacket where the lapel and the collar are joined.
- A mass obstructing a narrow passage.
- The contents of the stomach; something swallowed.
- An instance of gluttonous eating.
- The crop of a hawk.
- The throat; the gullet.
- A narrow entrance into the outwork of a fortification.
- A deep narrow passage with steep rocky sides; a ravine.
- The passage between the pharynx and the stomach
- A narrow pass (especially one between mountains)
- A narrow passage or entrance.
- That which is gorged or swallowed, especially by a hawk or other fowl.
- A deep ravine (usually with a river running through it)
- A filling or choking of a passage or channel by an obstruction.
- A concave molding; a cavetto.
- The groove of a pulley.
- A primitive device used instead of a fishhook, consisting of an object easy to be swallowed but difficult to be ejected or loosened, as a piece of bone or stone pointed at each end and attached in the middle to a line.
- The outline of the smallest cross section of a hyperboloid of revolution.
- Trolling with a dead bait on a double hook which the fish is given time to swallow, or gorge.
- Two fishhooks, separated by a piece of lead.
- The throat or gullet.
- A minimum circle on a surface of revolution, cut out by a plane perpendicular to the axis.
- A preparatory cut or channel in excavations, of sufficient width to admit of the passage of wagons.
- A peculiar concave cut in the teeth of some saw-blades. See gullet-saw.
- A gore, as in a skirt.
- Part of a hood or cowl.
- A piece of armor for the throat or upper part of the body.
- The lower end of a horse-collar about which pass the choke-strap and breast-strap.
- The arch of a bridge.
- A fish, the pike.
- The tube by which food and drink are carried from the pharynx to the stomach; the esophagus.
- Something shaped like the food passage, or performing similar functions.
- A channel for water.
- A concave cut made in the teeth of some saw blades.
- The throat or esophagus.
- The cytopharynx of a ciliate, through which food is ingested.
- The space between the teeth of a saw blade.
- A parcel or lot.
- Something resembling the throat in shape, position, or functions.
- The passage between the pharynx and the stomach
- The esophagus.
- The throat.
- An invagination into the cytoplasm of certain ciliates, used for food intake.
- The passage in the neck of an animal by which food and drink pass from the mouth to the stomach; the throat; technically, in anatomy, the esophagus.
GORGE vs GULLET: ADJECTIVE
- Gorgeous.
- N/A
GORGE vs GULLET: VERB
- To eat greedily and in large quantities.
- Overeat or eat immodestly; make a pig of oneself
- N/A
GORGE vs GULLET: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To eat gluttonously.
- To devour greedily.
- To eat greedily and to satiety.
- To stuff with food; glut.
- N/A
GORGE vs GULLET: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To glut; to fill up to the throat; to satiate.
- N/A
GORGE vs GULLET: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Make a pig of oneself
- Overeat or eat immodestly
- To feed greedily; stuff one's self.
- Hence—2. To glut; fill the throat or stomach of; satiate.
- To swallow; especially, to swallow with greediness or by gulps.
- To cut or make gullets in: as, to gullet a saw.
GORGE vs GULLET: RELATED WORDS
- Oesophagus, Ingurgitate, Gourmandize, Gormandize, Gormandise, Englut, Glut, Satiate, Defile, Engorge, Binge, Esophagus, Overeat, Overindulge, Gullet
- Intestines, Snout, Trachea, Abdominal cavity, Orifice, Digestive tract, Chest cavity, Windpipe, Stomach, Throat, Craw, Maw, Oesophagus, Gorge, Esophagus
GORGE vs GULLET: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Ravine, Stuff, Overgorge, Oesophagus, Ingurgitate, Gormandize, Englut, Glut, Satiate, Defile, Engorge, Binge, Esophagus, Overeat, Overindulge
- Anus, Bunghole, Snout, Trachea, Abdominal cavity, Orifice, Digestive tract, Chest cavity, Windpipe, Stomach, Throat, Maw, Oesophagus, Gorge, Esophagus
GORGE vs GULLET: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Boat Rentals offered by Flaming Gorge Resort located in Dutch John, Utah by the Green River and Flaming Gorge Reservoir.
- Cheddar Gorge Military Discount is promoted for expressing gratitude to military people from Cheddar Gorge.
- Canyon Rim Visitor Center sits on the edge of the gorge by the New River Gorge Bridge.
- Royal Gorge Field Office is implementing supplementary rules to regulate certain activities on public lands within Guffey Gorge in Park County, Colorado.
- Flaming Gorge Lodge and in Dutch John, both several miles from Flaming Gorge Dam.
- Tallulah Gorge State Park has attracted some significant entertainers with two individuals crossing the gorge on a high wire.
- Socialinteractions and economic commerce among Gorge residents were bifurcatedfrom the beginningprimarily because of Gorge geography.
- Glacier Gorge, Loch Vale, Chaos Canyon, and the Tyndall Gorge.
- Standley Chasm, Ormiston Gorge and Glen Helen Gorge.
- Ormiston Gorge, Ormiston Gorge Creek, Red Bank Gorge and Glen Helen Gorge.
- Han blir med to skattejegere som begge tror de vet hvor gullet ligger.
- Different chamber sizes will let you choose gullet mouth or throat BJ satisfaction.
- Constant: All the teeth have rake angle, gullet depth and evenly spaced.
- The height of tooth or broach gullet from root to cutting edge.
- CONSULTANT AS I COULDNT SWALLOW AND EVERYTHING WAS LYING IN MY GULLET.
- If by message you mean shoving a sword through his gullet.
- It sizzled down my gullet in a wave of hot nausea.
- Use cilia, oral groove, gullet and food vacuole for digestion.
- Gullet was arrested for felony Possession of a Controlled Substance.
- Injury to the gullet, stomach, blood vessels and nearby organs.
GORGE vs GULLET: QUESTIONS
- Quels sont les avantages des soutiens-gorge invisibles?
- What happened to juukan Gorge in Western Australia?
- What is the Plenty Gorge-Yarrambat horseriding trail?
- Is Tiger Leaping Gorge ready for hydroelectric power?
- What facilities are available at the Gorge Amphitheater?
- Why visit Nitmiluk National Park and Katherine Gorge?
- What happened to the original Ironbridge Gorge Museum?
- Comment entretenir son soutien-gorge sans armature?
- Is the Gorge Amphitheatre affiliated with watershed?
- Can you walk to Middle Gorge from Middle Gorge Station?
- What is the function of the gullet opening in a frog?
- What is the function of the gullet in human anatomy?
- How to choose the right gullet plates for your horse?
- How much space should be between withers and gullet?
- Is the gullet plate on a Kieffer saddle adjustable?
- Why is gullet channel width important for your horse?