throaty

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
13
Words With Friends
11
Letters
7
Pronunciation
/ˈθɹəʊti/

Definition of throaty

2 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. Produced in the throat; having a rough or coarse quality like a sound produced in the throat.
    “A throaty cough.”
    “The concluſion of this rambling Letter ſhall be a rhime of certain hard throary^([sic – meaning throaty]) Words which I was taught lately, and they are accounted the difficulteſt in all the whole Caſtilian Language, inſomuch that he who is able to pronounce them, is accounted Buen Romanciſta, a good ſpeaker of Spaniſh: […]”
    “But the most haunting of all the melodies is the warbling laughter of the Tulameen; its delicate note is far more powerful, more far-reaching than the throaty thunders of the Niagara.”
    “We could hear a motor running; it seemed too deep and throaty a motor to be the squad car, and after we passed the high school, the engine noise grew louder.”
    “Since forming in 2007 Mumford & Sons have hard-toured their way to a vast market for throaty folk that's strong on banjo and bass drum. They have released two enormous albums. But, wow, do they take some knocks back home.”
See all 2 definitions

adj

  1. Produced in the throat; having a rough or coarse quality like a sound produced in the throat.
    “A throaty cough.”
    “The concluſion of this rambling Letter ſhall be a rhime of certain hard throary^([sic – meaning throaty]) Words which I was taught lately, and they are accounted the difficulteſt in all the whole Caſtilian Language, inſomuch that he who is able to pronounce them, is accounted Buen Romanciſta, a good ſpeaker of Spaniſh: […]”
    “But the most haunting of all the melodies is the warbling laughter of the Tulameen; its delicate note is far more powerful, more far-reaching than the throaty thunders of the Niagara.”
    “We could hear a motor running; it seemed too deep and throaty a motor to be the squad car, and after we passed the high school, the engine noise grew louder.”
    “Since forming in 2007 Mumford & Sons have hard-toured their way to a vast market for throaty folk that's strong on banjo and bass drum. They have released two enormous albums. But, wow, do they take some knocks back home.”
  2. Having a dewlap or excess skin hanging under the neck. (of livestock or dogs)
    “Qualities exceptionable in a Herefordshire ox, for grazing. […] The neck short, thick, coarse; loaded with leather and dewlap; “throaty.””
    “[…] his flock is not so throaty as Merinos were formerly bred, as he considers throatiness objectionable.”
    “In 1558 the beagle had become well patronised by royalty and was painted by court painters, so that we know his type to have been already well established, a small hound with long, drooping ears, short pudgy body and throaty neck.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From throat + -y.

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