GULLET
\ɡˈʌlɪt], \ɡˈʌlɪt], \ɡ_ˈʌ_l_ɪ_t]\
Definitions of GULLET
- 2010 - New Age Dictionary Database
- 1913 - Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
- 1919 - The Winston Simplified Dictionary
- 1920 - A practical medical dictionary.
- 1919 - The Concise Standard Dictionary of the English Language
- 1898 - Warner's pocket medical dictionary of today.
- 1899 - The american dictionary of the english language.
- 1914 - Nuttall's Standard dictionary of the English language
- 1894 - The Clarendon dictionary
- 1874 - Etymological and pronouncing dictionary of the English language
- 1920 - A dictionary of scientific terms.
- 1898 - American pocket medical dictionary
- 1871 - The Cabinet Dictionary of the English Language
- 1790 - A Complete Dictionary of the English Language
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Something shaped like the food passage, or performing similar functions
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A preparatory cut or channel in excavations, of sufficient width for the passage of earth wagons.
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A concave cut made in the teeth of some saw blades.
By Oddity Software
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Something shaped like the food passage, or performing similar functions
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A preparatory cut or channel in excavations, of sufficient width for the passage of earth wagons.
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A concave cut made in the teeth of some saw blades.
By Noah Webster.
By William Dodge Lewis, Edgar Arthur Singer
By Stedman, Thomas Lathrop
By James Champlin Fernald
By Daniel Lyons
By Nuttall, P.Austin.
By William Hand Browne, Samuel Stehman Haldeman
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The passage in the neck of an animal down which food and drink pass into the stomach; the oesophagus.
By Stormonth, James, Phelp, P. H.
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The oesophagus; a muscular canal extending from mouth cavity to stomach; the canal between the cell-mouth or cytostome and the endoplasm of Ciliata.
By Henderson, I. F.; Henderson, W. D.
By Willam Alexander Newman Dorland