guttur

From LSJ

κοινὴ γὰρ ἡ τύχη καὶ τὸ μέλλον ἀόρατον → fortune is common to all, the future is unknown | fortune is common to all and the future unknown | fate is common to all and the future unknown

Source

Latin > English

guttur gutturis N M :: throat, neck; gullet; (reference to gluttony/appetite); swollen throat, goiter
guttur guttur gutturis N N :: throat, neck; gullet; (reference to gluttony/appetite); swollen throat, goiter

Latin > English (Lewis & Short)

guttur: ŭris, n. (ante-class.; also m. in
I acc. sing. gutturem, Plaut. Mil. 3, 2, 22; id. Aul. 2, 4, 25; Nov. Com. Fragm. v. 118 Rib.), the gullet, throat (cf.: faux, gula, jugulum): da meo gutturi gaudium, Plaut. Curc. 1, 2, 10; 49: venter gutturque resident ferias, id. Capt. 3, 1, 8: guttur homini tantum et suibus intumescit, Plin. 11, 37, 68, § 179: quis tumidum guttur miratur in Alpibus? Juv. 13, 162: (tamquam si in Alpibus gutturosos homines admireris, ubi tales sunt plurimi scilicet: nam lata et inflata colla habent, Vet. Schol. ad h. 1.): haud modicos tremulo fundens e gutture cantus, Cic. poët. Div. 1, 8, 14: liquidum tenui gutture cantat avis. Ov. Am. 1, 13, 8: parentis olim si quis impia manu Senile guttur fregerit, Hor. Epod. 3, 1.—In plur.: fodere guttura cultro, Ov. M. 7, 314: laqueo ligare guttura, id. ib. 6, 135.—Hence,
II Transf., gluttony: memorabile magni Gutturis exemplum, Juv. 2, 114.—Comically: inferior, i. e. anus, Plaut. Aul. 2, 4, 25.

Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)

guttŭr,¹¹ ŭris, n., gosier, gorge : Pl. Curc. 106 ; [poet.] Cic. Div. 1, 14 ; Hor. Epo. 3, 1 ; pl. guttura Ov. M. 7, 314 || [fig.] = gloutonnerie : Juv. 2, 114. masc. Varro Men. 337 ; acc. gutturem Pl. Mil. 385 ; Aul. 304.

Latin > German (Georges)

guttur, uris, n., die Gurgel, Kehle, bei den Vögeln der Kropf, I) eig.: a) der Menschen, Cels., Sen. u.a.: tumidum od. turgidum, dicker Hals, Kropf, Iuven. 13, 162. Vitr. 8, 3, 20 (u. so guttura, dicke Hälse, Geschwülste am Halse, Plin. 19, 45 u. 28, 42): inferior, scherzh. = der After, Plaut.: guttur alci frangere, jmdm. das Genick brechen, Hor. – b) der Tiere, suis, Plin.: atrum (corvi), Catull.: tria guttura pandens (Cerberus), Verg.: bes. als Sitz der Stimme der Vögel, modicos tremulo fundere e gutture cantus, Cic. poët.: liquidum tenui gutture cantat avis, Ov.: ovantes gutture corvi, Verg. – II) meton., eine gefräßige Gurgel = die Freßhaftigkeit, Iuven. 2, 114 (Cic. Cael. 44 jetzt vitium ventris et gurgitis). – / guttur als masc., Nom. bei Varro sat. Men. 237: Akk. gutturem, Nov. com. 118. Plaut. aul. 304 G.; mil. 835 u. trin. 1014. Lucil. 1167. Gargil. de cura boum § 2. – Nbf. guttor, Gloss. IV, 347, 56 u. V, 544, 12.

Latin > Chinese

guttur, uris. n. :: 嗓子咽喉

Translations

throat

Afrikaans: keel; Akkadian: 𒍣; Albanian: fyt, grykë; Arabic: حَلْق‎, حُلْقُوم‎; Egyptian Arabic: زور‎, حلق‎, حنجرة‎; Hijazi Arabic: حَلْق‎, زور‎; Armenian: կոկորդ; Asturian: gargüelu; Azerbaijani: boğaz; Bashkir: тамаҡ; Belarusian: горла; Bengali: গলা, ওলকম, হলকুম; Biatah Bidayuh: gunggong; Bikol Central: halunan; Binukid: bakeleng; Bulgarian: шия, гуша; Burmese: လည်ချောင်း; Catalan: gola; Chamicuro: nu'pijkaplejcha; Cherokee: ᎠᏴᏤᏂ; Chinese Mandarin: 嗓子, 喉嚨, 喉咙; Czech: hrdlo; Dalmatian: gaula; Danish: hals; Dutch: keel; Eastern Arrernte: ahentye; Esperanto: gorĝo; Estonian: kurk; Even: билга; Evenki: моңон; Faroese: hálsur; Finnish: kurkku; French: gorge; Friulian: gole; Galician: garganta, gorxa; Georgian: ყელი; German: Kehle; Alemannic German: Chrache; Greek: λαιμός; Ancient Greek: φάρυγξ, φάρυξ, φαρύγαθρον, φαρύγγεθρον, φαρύγεθρον, φαρύγετρον; Hebrew: גָּרוֹן‎; Hindi: गला; Hungarian: torok; Icelandic: háls; Indonesian: tenggorok, tekak; Irish: scornach; Istro-Romanian: bericåtĕ; Italian: gola; Japanese: 喉; Kannada: ಗೋಣು; Kazakh: тамақ; Khmer: បំពង់ក; Korean: 멱, 멱살; Kumyk: тамакъ; Kurdish Central Kurdish: قورگ‎, گەروو‎, گەلوو‎; Kyrgyz: тамак, богуз, булуң; Lao: ລຳຄໍ; Latgalian: reikle, gerkle; Latin: guttur, gula; Latvian: rikle; Lithuanian: gerklė; Macedonian: грло; Malay: tekak, kerongkong; Malayalam: തൊണ്ട; Maltese: gerżuma; Manchu: ᠪᡳᠯᡥᠠ; Mongolian: хоолой; Nanai: билга; Navajo: ayaayááh; Neapolitan: cannarone; Nepali: घाँटी; Norman: gorge; Norwegian Bokmål: hals, strupe; Nynorsk: hals, strupe; Occitan: gargamèla, garganta; Okinawan: 喉; Old Church Slavonic Cyrillic: гръло; Old English: þrote; Ossetian: хъуыр; Pashto: حلق‎, رغندى‎; Persian: گلو‎; Polish: gardło; Portuguese: garganta; Punjabi: ਸੰਘ; Quechua: kunka; Romagnol: gôla; Romanian: gât; Russian: горло, глотка; Sanskrit: गल; Scottish Gaelic: sgòrnan; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: гр̏ло, гр̏к, гр̀кљан, гу̏ша; Roman: gȑlo, gȑk, gr̀kljan, gȕša; Sicilian: ula; Slovak: hrdlo; Slovene: grlo; Sorbian Lower Sorbian: gjardło; Upper Sorbian: hordło; Southern Altai: боос, тамак; Spanish: garganta; Sudovian: gurkle; Swazi: umphimbo; Swedish: hals, strupe; Tagalog: lalamunan; Tajik: гулӯ; Tamil: தொண்டை; Tatar: бугаз; Telugu: గొంతు; Thai: ลำคอ; Tibetan: སྐེ, སྐེ་མདུན, མགུལ; Tocharian B: kor, ṣankw; Turkish: boğaz; Turkmen: bogaz, damak, bokurdak, bokyrdak; Tuvan: боостаа; Ukrainian: горло; Urdu: گلا‎, حلق‎; Uyghur: تاماق‎; Uzbek: tomoq, halqum, boʻgʻiz, boʻgʻoz; Venetian: goła, gola; Vietnamese: cuống họng, họng; Vilamovian: gügl; Volapük: gug; Welsh: gwddf; West Frisian: kiel, strôt; White Hmong: caj pas, qhov qa; Wiradhuri: gaddai, gadhaay; Yakut: күөмэй; Zazaki: qır; Zhuang: lajhoz; Zulu: umphimbo