stran·gle (str ăng g əl)
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v. stran·gled, stran·gling, stran·gles v.tr.1. a. To kill by squeezing the throat so as to choke or suffocate; throttle. b. To cut off the oxygen supply of; smother. 2. To suppress, repress, or stifle: strangle a scream. 3. To inhibit the growth or action of; restrict: "That artist is strangled who is forced to deal with human beings solely in social terms" (James Baldwin). v.intr.1. To become strangled. 2. To die from suffocation or strangulation; choke.
[Middle English stranglen, from Old French estrangler, from Latin strangulāre, from Greek strangalan, from strangalē, halter.]
strangler n. |