gannet
English
    
    Etymology
    
From Middle English ganet, gante, from Old English ganot, from Proto-West Germanic *ganat, *ganatō, from Proto-Germanic *ganataz, *ganutô (“gander”), ultimately related to Proto-Germanic *ganzô.
Noun
    
gannet (plural gannets)
Quotations
    
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:gannet.
Synonyms
    
- (voracious eater): see Thesaurus:glutton
Derived terms
    
Translations
    
sea bird
| 
 | 
glutton — see glutton
Verb
    
gannet (third-person singular simple present gannets, present participle ganneting, simple past and past participle ganneted)
- (chiefly transitive, informal, Britain) To wolf down, gobble or eat (something) voraciously.
- Gaynor Kay, Pebble in the Grass (page 115)
- She was no longer in the company of her older sister and mother who had often scolded her for ganneting down her food.
 
 
- Gaynor Kay, Pebble in the Grass (page 115)
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