guttlesome

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From guttle (to swallow (something) greedily; to gobble; to guzzle; to eat voraciously; to gorge) +‎ -some (characterized by some specific condition or quality, usually to a considerable degree).

Adjective[edit]

guttlesome (comparative more guttlesome, superlative most guttlesome)

  1. (British, dialect) Greedily eating and gorging oneself; gluttonous.
    • 1861 February 2, “The Sinfulness of Balls”, in Saturday Review, volume 11, number 275, page 115:
      'What one of those guttlesome parsons who came every year to our dinners?' A momentary sadness passed over the company; on my mind the impression lingered; the talking, eating, evangelical parson, always going out to dinners, was dead.
    • 1919, Lucas Malet, The Tall Villa, George H. Doran Company, →OCLC, page 95:
      Since when I've cleared the table to feed these guttlesome swans—on the best cake, too, which is simply immoral.