late 13c., from Old French estrangler "choke, suffocate, throttle" (Modern French étrangler), from Latin strangulare "to choke, stifle, check, constrain," from Greek strangalan "to choke, twist," from strangale "a halter, cord, lace," related to strangos "twisted," from PIE root *strenk- "tight, narrow; pull tight, twist" (see string (n.)). Related: Strangled; strangling.
strangle a laugh
the imperialist nation wanted to strangle the free trade between the two small countries
strait-jacket
strait-laced
strand
strange
stranger
strangle
strangle-hold
strangler
strangulation
strap
strap-hanger