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Gorge   /gɔrdʒ/   Listen
noun
Gorge  n.  
1.
The throat; the gullet; the canal by which food passes to the stomach. "Wherewith he gripped her gorge with so great pain." "Now, how abhorred!... my gorge rises at it."
2.
A narrow passage or entrance; as:
(a)
A defile between mountains.
(b)
The entrance into a bastion or other outwork of a fort; usually synonymous with rear.
3.
That which is gorged or swallowed, especially by a hawk or other fowl. "And all the way, most like a brutish beast, e spewed up his gorge, that all did him detest."
4.
A filling or choking of a passage or channel by an obstruction; as, an ice gorge in a river.
5.
(Arch.) A concave molding; a cavetto.
6.
(Naut.) The groove of a pulley.
7.
(Angling) 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.
Gorge circle (Gearing), the outline of the smallest cross section of a hyperboloid of revolution.
Circle of the gorge (Math.), a minimum circle on a surface of revolution, cut out by a plane perpendicular to the axis.
Gorge fishing, trolling with a dead bait on a double hook which the fish is given time to swallow, or gorge.
Gorge hook, two fishhooks, separated by a piece of lead.



verb
Gorge  v. t.  (past & past part. gorged; pres. part. gorging)  
1.
To swallow; especially, to swallow with greediness, or in large mouthfuls or quantities. "The fish has gorged the hook."
2.
To glut; to fill up to the throat; to satiate. "The giant gorged with flesh." "Gorge with my blood thy barbarous appetite."



Gorge  v. i.  To eat greedily and to satiety.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Gorge" Quotes from Famous Books



... of very nearly three thousand feet, which height they maintained for about half a mile before they started to dip toward the far end. Small patches of wait-a-bit and other thorn bushes sparsely dotted the floor of the ravine, or gorge, and about halfway through there was a little grove of mimosa, in the midst of which we caught fleeting, indistinct glimpses of certain moving things which Piet declared ...
— Through Veld and Forest - An African Story • Harry Collingwood

... [Phisterer, Statistical Record, 95]. Colonel Eugene A. Carr of the Third Illinois Cavalry, commanding the Fourth Division of Curtis's army, described the tavern itself as "situated on the west side of the Springfield and Fayetteville road, at the head of a gorge known as Cross Timber Hollow (the head of Sugar Creek) ..." [Official Records, vol. viii, 258]. "Sugar Creek Hollow," wrote Curtis, "extends for miles, a gorge, with rough precipitate sides ..." [Ibid., 589]. It was there the closing ...
— The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War • Annie Heloise Abel

... Nicholas believes in his uncle, who promises to befriend Nicholas's mother and sister, and obtains for Nicholas himself a situation as usher in a Yorkshire school kept by one Squeers. But the young fellow's gorge rises at the sickening cruelty exercised in the school, and he leaves it, having first beaten Mr. Squeers,—leaves it followed by a poor shattered creature called Smike. Meanwhile Ralph, the usurer, befriends his sister-in-law and niece after his ...
— Life of Charles Dickens • Frank Marzials

... hours they roamed over the mountainous region at high velocity, seeking the best possible location, and finally they found one that was almost ideal—a narrow canyon overhung with heavy trees, opening into a wide, deep gorge upon a level with its floor. A mighty waterfall cascaded into the gorge just above the canyon, and here and there could be seen black outcrops which Stevens, after a close scrutiny, declared to be coal. He deftly guided their cumbersome wedge of steel into the retreat, allowed it ...
— Spacehounds of IPC • Edward Elmer Smith

... as the fight instinct leads us to football, or the hunt instinct sends every dog sniffing at dawn through the streets of his town. Not every one is thus atavistic, if this be atavism; not every American is sensitive to spruce spires, or the hermit thrush's chant, or white water in a forest gorge, or the meadow lark across the frosted fields. Naturally. The surprising fact is that in a bourgeois civilization like ours, so ...
— Definitions • Henry Seidel Canby


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