gulpful

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From gulp +‎ -ful.

Noun[edit]

gulpful (plural gulpfuls or gulpsful)

  1. The amount swallowed in a single gulp.
    • 1904, James Hopper, “The Failure”, in McClure’s Magazine, page 314:
      The taste drove him mad, and, dropping down on hands and knees like a dog, he put his lips to the side of the bucket and drew in long gulpfuls.
    • 1968, Victor Wartofsky, Mr. Double and Other Stories, Joshua Chachik Publishing, page 140:
      Funky held out an unlabeled bottle of whisky to Clifford, who drank a gulpful.
    • 1977, Lois Karen Baldwin, Down on Bugger Run: Family Group and the Social Base of Folklore, page 91:
      He had drunk on beery-extra layers of fat to his already substantial torso until his midsection hung in front with an almost improbably swollen belly which lugged at his heart and squeezed his lungs so that his breathing was a rhythmic gasping for gulpsful of air with the effort to trundle his bulk about on foreshortened legs.