/ˈɡɔɾʃa/, [ˈɡɔɾ.ʃɐ], /ˈɡɔɾʃa/
OriginFrom Old French gorge, from Late Latin gurga, likely connected to Latin gurges (“a whirlpool, eddy, gulf or sea”).
- femininegorge, gullet, throat
“A muller do Serafiño
Por unha pinga rabéa,
Quérea de cote a probiña,
E se non bebe, toléa.
Parece un longo varal,
tratándose de viño,
Gorxa tan ancha ela mostra
Com’a canle dun bô muíño.
Pro, se non v” — Serafin's wife
for a drop rages;
she wants it all the time, poor thing,
and if she doesn't drink she goes mad.
She seems a long rod,
but when it is about wine,
she shows a gorge as wide
as the flume o
Formsgorxas(plural) · gorja(alternative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0