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gaggle

English

Etymology

From Middle English gagelen (to cackle; cackle like a goose). Compare Dutch gaggelen (to cackle), Icelandic gagl (small goose; gosling).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??æ?l?/
  • Rhymes: -æ??l
  • Hyphenation: gag?gle

Noun

gaggle (plural gaggles)

  1. (collective) A group of geese when they are on the ground or on the water.
  2. (by extension) Any group or gathering of related things.
    Synonym: bunch

Derived terms

  • press gaggle

Translations

Verb

gaggle (third-person singular simple present gaggles, present participle gaggling, simple past and past participle gaggled)

  1. To make a noise like a goose; to cackle.
    • Geese do gaggle
    • 1733, Jonathan Swift, "A New Simile for the Ladies with Useful Annotations by Dr. Sheridan", note 7 (in The Poems of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Vol. II):
      When a friend asked Socrates, how he could bear the scolding of his wife Xantippe? he retorted, and asked him, how he could bear the gaggling of his geese?

Translations

See also

  • skein
  • wedge

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guggle

English

Etymology

From gurgle.

Verb

guggle (third-person singular simple present guggles, present participle guggling, simple past and past participle guggled)

  1. To make a sound as of liquid being poured from a small-necked container
  2. (of a liquid) To pour from a container and make this sound

Noun

guggle (plural guggles)

  1. The sound of liquid being poured.

Synonyms

  • gurgle

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