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tongue

/tuhng/US // tʌŋ //UK // (tʌŋ) //

舌头,舌苔,舌尖,语言

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Anatomy. the usually movable organ in the floor of the mouth in humans and most vertebrates, functioning in eating, in tasting, and, in humans, in speaking.
    • : Zoology. an analogous organ in invertebrate animals.
    • : the tongue of an animal, as an ox, beef, or sheep, used for food, often prepared by smoking or pickling.
    • : the human tongue as the organ of speech: No tongue must ever tell the secret.
    • : the faculty or power of speech: a sight no tongue can describe.
    • : speech or talk, especially mere glib or empty talk.
    • : manner or character of speech: a flattering tongue.
    • : the language of a particular people, region, or nation: the Hebrew tongue.
    • : a dialect.
    • : a people or nation distinguished by its language.
    • : tongues, speech, often incomprehensible, typically uttered during moments of religious ecstasy.Compare speaking in tongues, glossolalia.
    • : an object that resembles an animal's tongue in shape, position, or function.
    • : a strip of leather or other material under the lacing or fastening of a shoe.
    • : a piece of metal suspended inside a bell that strikes against the side producing a sound; clapper.
    • : a vibrating reed or similar structure in a musical instrument, as in a clarinet, or in part of a musical instrument, as in an organ reed pipe.
    • : the pole extending from a carriage or other vehicle between the animals drawing it.
    • : a projecting strip along the center of the edge or end of a board, for fitting into a groove in another board.
    • : a narrow strip of land extending into a body of water; cape.
    • : a section of ice projecting outward from the submerged part of an iceberg.
    • : Machinery. a long, narrow projection on a machine.
    • : that part of a railroad switch that is shifted to direct the wheels of a locomotive or car to one or the other track of a railroad.
    • : the pin of a buckle, brooch, etc.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    tongued, tongu·ing.

    • : to articulate by strokes of the tongue.
    • : Carpentry. to cut a tongue on.to join or fit together by a tongue-and-groove joint.
    • : to touch with the tongue.
    • : to articulate or pronounce.
    • : Archaic. to reproach or scold.to speak or utter.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    tongued, tongu·ing.

    • : to tongue tones played on a clarinet, trumpet, etc.
    • : to talk, especially idly or foolishly; chatter; prate.
    • : to project like a tongue.

Phrases

  • tongue hangs out, one's
  • tongue in cheek, with
  • tongues wag
  • bite one's tongue
  • cat got someone's tongue
  • hold one's tongue
  • keep a civil tongue
  • on the tip of one's tongue
  • slip of the lip (tongue)

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The budding naturalist soon learned to identify plants by feel, touching their hairs with his lower lip and their stamens and pistils with his tongue.

  • Students and workers with no symptoms might start swabbing their noses or tongues every few days to make sure they haven’t been exposed.

  • On a windy winter afternoon, Raluca Mateescu leaned against a fence post at the University of Florida’s Beef Teaching Unit while a Brahman heifer sniffed inquisitively at the air and reached out its tongue in search of unseen food.

  • As you write, “Economics is the mother tongue of public policy.”

  • So she pumped the samples onto the tongue and allowed it to roll right off.

  • After the release of the trailer for the special last week, TLC received a requisite and perhaps well-deserved tongue-lashing.

  • Abramson, biting her tongue, was widely portrayed in rival outlets as classily above the fray.

  • The second is strangled tongue disease, the English inability to express real feelings in conversation.

  • Language was no barrier; just about every tongue on the planet was babbling away, caught up in the elaborate mystique of a cult.

  • Sata, who was known as King Cobra because of his sharp tongue, was thought to have been seriously ill for some time.

  • “Perhaps you do not speak my language,” she said in Urdu, the tongue most frequently heard in Upper India.

  • Now first we shall want our pupil to understand, speak, read and write the mother tongue well.

  • The flute and the psaltery make a sweet melody, but a pleasant tongue is above them both.

  • Each sentence came as if torn piecemeal from his unwilling tongue; short, jerky phrases, conceived in pain and delivered in agony.

  • If she have a tongue that can cure, and likewise mitigate and shew mercy: her husband is not like other men.