From the Free Online Dictionary:
chor·tle (chôrtl) n.A snorting, joyful laugh or chuckle.
intr. & tr.v. chor·tled, chor·tling, chor·tlesTo utter a chortle or express with a chortle.
A chortle is a supressed or muffled laugh. To chortle is to laugh in a restrained way.
a chortle is a a mumble laugh
When someone chortles, they chuckle. A chortle is a breathy laugh.
if you mean the food recipe than it is: carrot cake coconut pink lemonade
Hortle
chortle
chuckle
Chortle is a cross between a chuckle and a snort. Chortle was first mentioned in "Through the Looking-Glass" by Lewis Carroll, in 1872. This word is sometimes call a blend, when you blend two words together.
Sparkle, chortle
No, just a noun or verb.
The origin of chortle is 1871: coined by Lewis Carroll in Through the Looking Glass; probably a blend of chuckle and snort.
Snort and chuckle
Chortle is a snorting type of laugh. When she heard a funny joke, Leslie would chortle and make the rest of us laugh! The boy suppressed a chortle when his teacher sat in the glue."He chortled in his joy!" (Lewis Carroll) He chortled annoyingly at his own joke. The kids chortled when the teacher told a joke. "Do not chortle while I am teaching!" She said, after she found the children chortling over a passed note.
"He chortled loudly at his own joke".