Throat
Old English throte, throtu, of Germanic origin; related to German Drossel . Compare with throttle.
wiktionary
From Middle English throte, from Old English þrote, þrota, þrotu(“throat”), from Proto-Germanic *þrutō(“throat”), from Proto-Indo-European *trud-(“to swell, become stiff”). Cognate with Dutch strot(“throat”), German Drossel(“throttle, gorge of game (wild animals)”)(etymology 2), Icelandic þroti(“swelling”), Swedish trut.
etymonline
throat (n.)
Old English þrote (implied in þrotbolla "the Adam's apple, larynx," literally "throat boll"), related to þrutian "to swell," from Proto-Germanic *thrut- (source also of Old High German drozza, German Drossel, Old Saxon strota, Middle Dutch strote, Dutch strot "throat"), of uncertain origin. Italian strozza "throat," strozzare "to strangle" are Germanic loan-words. College slang for "competitive student" is 1970s, from cutthroat.