Definition of "throaty"
throaty
adjective
comparative throatier, superlative throatiest
(of a sound) Produced in the throat; having a rough or coarse quality like a sound produced in the throat.
Quotations
The concluſion of this rambling Letter ſhall be a rhime of certain hard throary[sic – meaning throaty] Words which I was taught lately, and they are accounted the difficulteſt in all the whole Caſtilian Language, inſomuch that he who is able to pronounce them, is accounted Buen Romanciſta, a good ſpeaker of Spaniſh: […]
1622 August 11 (Gregorian calendar), James Howell, “LXXIII. To Cap. T. P. from Madrid”, in Epistolæ Ho-Elianæ. Familiar Letters Domestic and Forren. […], 3rd edition, volume II, London: […] Humphrey Mos[e]ley, […], published 1655, section VI, page 384
Having a dewlap or excess skin hanging under the neck. (of livestock or dogs)
Quotations
In 1558 the beagle had become well patronised by royalty and was painted by court painters, so that we know his type to have been already well established, a small hound with long, drooping ears, short pudgy body and throaty neck.
1926, Warren Miller, The American Hunting Dog, New York: Appleton, Chapter , p. 31