Gurgle

Verb

 * 1) To flow with a bubbling sound.
 * The bath water gurgled down the drain.
 * 1) To make such a sound.
 * The baby gurgled with delight.

Noun

 * 1) A gurgling sound.
 * 2) *1898,, Chapter 4
 * Then the conversation broke off, and there was little more talking, only a noise of men going backwards and forwards, and of putting down of kegs and the hollow gurgle of good liquor being poured from breakers into the casks.

Adjectives for Gurgle
slobbery; liquid; rich; childish; thick; horrible ; oozing.

Adverbs for Gurgle
drearily; monotonously; pleasantly; musically; melodiously; ceaselessly; perpetually; spasmodically.

Thesaurus
babble, babbling, blubber, boil, boil over, bubble, bubble over, bubble up, bubbling, burble, burbling, condense, distill, dribble, drip, dripple, drop, effervesce, ferment, filter, fizz, fizzle, guggle, gurgling, hiss, lap, leach, lixiviate, murmur, murmuring, percolate, plash, plashing, plop, purl, ripple, seep, seethe, simmer, slosh, sparkle, splash, splashing, spurtle, swash, sweat, swish, trickle, trill, wash, weep, work

Etymology
Back formation from gurguling "a rumbling in the belly". Akin to and  gorgelen "to gurgle",  gurgeln "to gargle", and perhaps to  gurgulio "throat"

Verb

 * Armenian: կլկլալ, բլդբլդալ,  կարկաչել,  պճպճալ
 * Czech:
 * Finnish: kurluttaa


 * German:
 * Polish: bulgotać, gulgotać
 * Russian: ,
 * Scottish Gaelic:


 * Czech:
 * Finnish: kurluttaa
 * German:
 * Norwegian:


 * Polish: gaworzyć, bulgotać
 * Russian:
 * Scottish Gaelic:

Noun

 * Armenian: կլկլոց, բլդբլդոց
 * Czech:
 * Finnish: kurlutus
 * German: Gurgeln


 * Polish: bulgot, gulgot,  bulgotanie,  gaworzenie
 * Russian: бульканье
 * Scottish Gaelic:
 * Spanish: gluglú

Anagrams

 * glurge
 * lugger

Verb
gurgle