Advertisement

gargle (v.)

1520s, from Middle French gargouiller "to gurgle, bubble" (14c.), from Old French gargole "throat, waterspout," which is perhaps from garg-, imitative of throat sounds, + *goule, dialect word for "mouth," from Latin gula "throat." Related: Gargled; gargling. The earlier, native, form of the word was Middle English gargarize (early 15c.), from Latin gargarizare, from Greek gargarizein.

gargle (n.)

1650s, "liquid used in gargling," from gargle (v.).

Others are reading

Advertisement
Definitions of gargle from WordNet
1
gargle (v.)
utter with gargling or burbling sounds;
gargle (v.)
rinse one's mouth and throat with mouthwash;
gargle with this liquid
Synonyms: rinse
2
gargle (n.)
a medicated solution used for gargling and rinsing the mouth;
Synonyms: mouthwash
gargle (n.)
the sound produced while gargling;
From wordnet.princeton.edu