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The verb is possibly derived from gut(“belly”) + -le(frequentativesuffix), perhaps influenced by guzzle(“to drink or eat quickly, voraciously, or to excess; to gulp down; to swallow greedily, continually, or with gusto”).[1][2]
VVhy a Hot Iron vvould have Hiſs'd if you had but Spit upon't. The Fool carry'd this Philoſophy avvay vvith him, and took an Occaſion aftervvard to Spit in his Porridge, to try if they'd Hiſs. They did not Hiſs it ſeems, and ſo he Guttled 'em up, and Scalt his Chops.
And Marſeus (he vvho gave his houſe to the actreſs Origo) lives again in the perſon of their young heir, vvho novv guttles dovvn vvith an actreſs the laſt mortgage of an eſtate he has near the Eſcurial.
We might have Dido's maid coming after her mistress in the shower with pattens and an umbrella; or Cleopatra's page guttling the figs in the basket which had brought the asp that killed the mistress of Antony.
Are you, who are setting up to be a man of the world and a philosopher, to tell me that the aim of life is to guttle three courses and dine off silver?
One, Frugal, on his Birth-Day fears to dine: / Does at a Penny's coſt in Herbs repine, / And hardly dares to dip his Fingers in the Brine. / Prepar'd as Prieſt of his ovvn Rites, to ſtand, / He ſprinkles Pepper vvith a ſparing hand. / His Jolly Brother, oppoſite in ſence, / Laughs at his Thrift; and laviſh of Expence, / Quaffs, Crams, and Guttles, in his ovvn defence.
In a vvord, an Engliſhman, after guttling on pudding and beef, vvell diluted vvith ſtrong beer, talks avvay, of all other nations, as if they had not the ſame creator.
Here idiotiſm is inveſted vvith place and honour, and a goat or a ſvvine guttles in a chair of ſtate.
1783, , “A Lecture on Eating and Drinking: Spoken in the Character of a Drunken Parson”, in The Lusorium; Being a Collection of Convivial Songs, Lectures, &ct., 2nd edition, : C. O’Brien,; sold by Mr. Lewis,, Mr. Durham,, Mr. Steel,, Mrs. Peat,, Mr. Tomlinson,, →OCLC, page 23:
I am perſuaded, my dearly beloved, that no man vvould guttle, or gormandize, on our modern ſtevvs, ſoups, ſpiced meats, and the like, if he had but a doctor's bill lying before him, and reflected on the enormous charge for an emetic; or if he conſidered that he vvho guttleth maketh his body a kind of barbecued hog, […]
1837, White, “Section III. The Evils of Quarantine Laws, and Non-existence of Pestilential Contagion.”, in The Evils of Quarantine Laws, and Non-existence of Pestilential Contagion;, London: Effingham Wilson,, →OCLC, page 79:
The learned doctor declares that "soup" is an excellent substitute for "solid diet;" and that starvation with the poor is almost equivalent to gormandizing and guttling with "the more substantial classes of society."
1841, Michael Angelo Titmarsh [pseudonym; William Makepeace Thackeray], “Papers by Mr. Yellowplush, Sometime Footman in Many Genteel Families. I. Miss Shum’s Husband. Chapter I.”, in Comic Tales and Sketches., volume I, London: Hugh Cunningham,, →OCLC, page 2:
here we were, quarrelling and making up, sober and tipsy, starving and guttling by turns, just as ma got money or spent it.
1890s, Poverty Knock; quoted in Ian Watson, “Song and Work”, in Song and Democratic Culture in Britain: An Approach to Popular Culture in Social Movements, London, Canberra, A.C.T.: Croom Helm; New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, 1983, →ISBN, page 106:
Poverty, poverty knock, My loom is sayin' all day. / […] / I know I can guttle, when I hear my shuttle, go / Poverty, poverty knock.
Quotation of a 19th-century song called “Poverty Knock”; the title refers to the repetitive sound of the loom.
1817 October 4, William Hone, “The Guttlers, and the New Lord Mayor”, in The Reformists’ Register, and Weekly Commentary, volume II, number 11, London: William Hone,, →OCLC, column 324:
The top of the great stained glass windows at each end of the hall, are cut off to accommodate a new flat plaster roof;—the old Gothic one, with its rich groining and carved work, could not be renewed but at the expense of at least two guttles!
1839, “A devoted friend, to non-intrusion” , “Dedication. To the Farmers in the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright.”, in A Letter to William Maxwell, Esq., Younger, of Cardoness, Addressed to Him as a Candidate for Parliament:, Manchester: Thomas Smith,, →OCLC, page xv:
lague tak the greedy guttles, I wish they wud gie ae meal, out o' the five, to their head.
Our doctor used to call me a ravenous eater; my mamma remarked I was blessed with an excellent appetite; cook said I was ‘a rare good one for vittals;’ and James, my own brother, whom I loved almost as much as stewed beef, invariably called me a ‘guttles.’ This unkind nickname pained me. It was vulgar, and more un-Christianly because it was so cuttingly true.]
(obsolete,rare) Something which is eaten voraciously.
1784–1789, Aulus Persius Flaccus, “Satire V”, in M Madan, transl., A New and Literal Translation of the Satires of Aulus Persius Flaccus, Dublin: John Exshaw,, published 1795, →OCLC, page 141, lines 111–112:
And can you paſs by money fixed in mud, / Nor ſvvallovv vvith your guttle mercurial ſpittle?