Определение mouth в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
- The opening of a creature through which food is ingested
Open your mouth and say 'aah', directed the doctor.
- The end of a river out of which water flows
The mouth of the river is a good place to go birdwatching in spring and autumn.
- To pick up or handle with the lips or mouth, but not chew or swallow
The fish mouthed the lure, but didn't bite.
- An outlet, aperture or orifice
The mouth of a cave.
- A loud or overly talkative person
My kid sister is a real mouth; she never shuts up.
- To speak about something
He mouthed his opinions on the subject at the meeting.
- To make the actions of speech, without producing sound
The prompter mouthed the words to the actor, who had forgotten them.
- {v} to mutter, grumble, speak big, chew
- {n} the aperture in the head where food is received, an entrance, opening, wry face, cry
- To utter with a voice affectedly big or swelling; to speak in a strained or unnaturally sonorous manner
- {f} express, give voice to; mumble; put into the mouth; rub or nuzzle with the lips
- If you mouth something, you say it, especially without believing it or without understanding it. I mouthed some sympathetic platitudes
- A wry face; a grimace; a mow
- n In man, the gateway to the soul; in woman, the outlet of
- the place where a river empties into a larger body of water
- If you have a number of mouths to feed, you have the responsibility of earning enough money to feed and look after that number of people. He had to feed his family on the equivalent of four hundred pounds a month and, with five mouths to feed, he found this very hard
- Aivanounenglish | adronato
- If you mouth something, you form words with your lips without making any sound. I mouthed a goodbye and hurried in behind Momma `It's for you,' he mouthed
- the opening through which food is taken in and vocalizations emerge; "he stuffed his mouth with candy"
- in ridicule or contempt
- The entrance into a harbor
- articulate silently; form words with the lips only; "She mouthed a swear word"
- Air enters the body through either the open mouth or the nose It travels down the trachea to the lungs, where the oxygen in it passes into the bloodstream
- an impudent or insolent rejoinder; "don't give me any of your sass"
- The place where a stream discharges to a larger stream, a lake, or the sea
- The opening through which the waters of a river or any stream are discharged
- You can say that someone has a particular kind of mouth to indicate that they speak in a particular kind of way or that they say particular kinds of things. You've got such a crude mouth! + -mouthed -mouthed Simon, their smart-mouthed teenage son
- The opening of a piece of ordnance, through which it is discharged
- The opening through which an animal receives food; the aperture between the jaws or between the lips; also, the cavity, containing the tongue and teeth, between the lips and the pharynx; the buccal cavity
- {i} facial feature above the chin and below the nose; part of the body used for eating and communicating; entrance, opening; point where a river runs into a sea; spout, nozzle; rudeness, insolent speech (Informal)
- The mouth of a river is the place where it flows into the sea. the town at the mouth of the River Dart
- a natural opening, as the part of a stream that empties into a larger body of water
- an opening that resembles a mouth (as of a cave or a gorge); "he rode into the mouth of the canyon"; "they built a fire at the mouth of the cave"
- Cavity bounded by the bill No picture yet
- To make mouths at
- a person conceived as a consumer of food; "he has four mouths to feed"
- A principal speaker; one who utters the common opinion; a mouthpiece
- Your mouth is the area of your face where your lips are or the space behind your lips where your teeth and tongue are. She clamped her hand against her mouth His mouth was full of peas. + -mouthed -mouthed He straightened up and looked at me, open-mouthed
- the opening of a jar or bottle; "the jar had a wide mouth" the externally visible part of the oral cavity on the face and the system of organs surrounding the opening; "she wiped lipstick from her mouth" the opening through which food is taken in and vocalizations emerge; "he stuffed his mouth with candy" the point where a stream issues into a larger body of water; "New York is at the mouth of the Hudson" an opening that resembles a mouth (as of a cave or a gorge); "he rode into the mouth of the canyon"; "they built a fire at the mouth of the cave" a person conceived as a consumer of food; "he has four mouths to feed" articulate silently; form words with the lips only; "She mouthed a swear word" touch with the mouth
- emphasis If you say that someone does not open their mouth, you are emphasizing that they never say anything at all. Sometimes I hardly dare open my mouth
- If you keep your mouth shut about something, you do not talk about it, especially because it is a secret. You wouldn't be here now if she'd kept her mouth shut
- An opening affording entrance or exit; orifice; aperture; The opening of a vessel by which it is filled or emptied, charged or discharged; as, the mouth of a jar or pitcher; the mouth of the lacteal vessels, etc
- The opening at the base of the balloon envelope through which the flames from the burner passes to heat the air inside the envelope This is sometimes referred to as the 'throat' - but by who I don't know
- to live hand to mouth: see hand heart in your mouth: see heart from the horse's mouth: see horse to put your money where your mouth is: see money shut your mouth: see shut to be born with a silver spoon in your mouth: see spoon word of mouth: see word. or oral cavity or buccal cavity Orifice through which food and air enter the body. It opens to the outside at the lips and empties into the throat at the rear and is bounded by the lips, cheeks, hard and soft palates, and glottis. Its chief structures are the teeth (see tooth), tongue, and palate. It is the site of chewing and speech formation. The mouth is lined by mucous membranes containing small glands that, along with the salivary glands, keep it moist and clear of food and other debris. mouth organ foot and mouth disease hoof and mouth disease
- The open end of the cap opposite the top
- End of a stream Point at which a stream enters a lake, sea, or ocean
- express in speech; "She talks a lot of nonsense"; "This depressed patient does not verbalize"
- The crosspiece of a bridle bit, which enters the mouth of an animal
- To take into the mouth; to seize or grind with the mouth or teeth; to chew; to devour
- Speech; language; testimony
- a spokesperson (as a lawyer)
- the opening of a jar or bottle; "the jar had a wide mouth"
- touch with the mouth
- Cry; voice
- the point where a stream issues into a larger body of water; "New York is at the mouth of the Hudson"
- The opening or entrance of any cavity, as a cave, pit, well, or den
- The mouth of a cave, hole, or bottle is its entrance or opening. By the mouth of the tunnel he bent to retie his lace. = entrance + -mouthed -mouthed He put the flowers in a wide-mouthed blue vase
- The open end of the cartridge case into which the bullet is seated The "mouth diameter" is the internal measurement of this feature
- To form or cleanse with the mouth; to lick, as a bear her cub
- To make grimaces, esp
- To put mouth to mouth; to kiss
- the externally visible part of the oral cavity on the face and the system of organs surrounding the opening; "she wiped lipstick from her mouth"
- To speak with a full, round, or loud, affected voice; to vociferate; to rant
- piehole
- mouth breather
- A person who is boorish, stupid, or otherwise unattractive
She's a philosophy major from Brown, now working retail at Niagara Falls, living in a trailer and working for a mouth breather of a boss.
- mouth breather
- A person who routinely inhales and exhales through the mouth, instead of through the nose
Respirations cannot be recorded by this method, if the subject is a mouth breather (as no air flows by the thermistor in the nose).
- mouth breathers
- plural form of mouth breather
- mouth music
- The vocal imitation of instrumental music
- mouth of a sailor
- The characteristic of regularly using vulgar language, especially strong profanities; a person having this characteristic
- mouth off
- To complain or otherwise express oneself in a loud, immoderate manner
- mouth off
- To talk impudently, especially to one's superior
- mouth organ
- The panpipes
- mouth organ
- The Jew's harp
- mouth organ
- The harmonica
- mouth organs
- plural form of mouth organ
- mouth-breather
- Alternative spelling of mouth breather
- mouth-to-mouth
- mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
- mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
- A first aid technique to return an unconscious person's respiration by pressing the rescuer's mouth against the mouth of the patient and blowing air into his/her lungs
- mouth guard
- Mouth guards are dental devices worn on the upper or lower teeth. They can be hard or soft, and may cover all or some of the teeth
- mouth harp
- (Muzik) The Jew's harp, jaw harp, mouth harp, or Ozark harp, trump and juice harp, is thought to be one of the oldest musical instruments in the world; a musician apparently playing it can be seen in a Chinese drawing from the 4th century BC. Despite its common English name, and the sometimes used Jew's trump, it has no particular connection with the Jewish people or Judaism. This instrument is native to Asia and used in all tribes of Turkish people in Asia where it is variously referred to as a temir komuz, agiz komuzu or gubuz
- mouth to mouth
- Denoting a method of artificial respiration in which a person breathes into someone's lungs through their mouth
- mouth hole
- a hole (as in a ski mask) for the mouth
- mouth off
- talk in a noisy, excited, or declamatory manner
- mouth off
- {f} express one's opinion loudly and in a tactless manner; complain loudly; sass; speak rudely; talk back; answer rudely
- mouth organ
- musical instrument played with the mouth, harmonica
- mouth organ
- harmonica: a small rectangular free-reed instrument having a row of free reeds set back in air holes and played by blowing into the desired hole
- mouth organ
- A mouth organ is the same as a harmonica. a small musical instrument that you play by blowing or sucking and moving it from side to side near your mouth = harmonica
- mouth ulcer
- canker sore a sore area in the mouth of people or animals, caused by illness or a disease
- mouth-feel
- {i} sensation of how food or drink feels in a person's mouth; feeling in the mounth when testing and evaluating food or drink
- mouth-to-mouth
- form of artificial respiration in which air is breathed directly into a victim's mouth or nose
- mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
- lifesaving method in which a person breathes air directly into the mouth or nose of the injured person
- mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
- If you give someone who has stopped breathing mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, you breathe into their mouth to make them start breathing again. a method used to make someone start breathing again by blowing air into their mouth CPR
- mouth-watering
- pleasing to the sense of taste
- mouth-watering
- emphasis If you describe something as mouth-watering, you are emphasizing that it is very attractive. Prizes worth a mouth-watering £9.6 million are unclaimed. food that is mouth-watering looks or smells extremely good
- mouth-watering
- Mouth-watering food looks or smells extremely nice. hundreds of cheeses, in a mouth-watering variety of shapes, textures and tastes
- motor mouth
- One who talks incessantly; a chatty or loquacious person
He's such a motor mouth that I couldn't get a word in.
- motor mouth
- An incessant talker
- motor mouth
- (Derogatory slang) someone who talks constantly, chatterer
- a closed mouth gathers no feet
- One who does not speak can be certain he won't say anything embarrassing
- all mouth and no trousers
- Alternative form of all mouth and trousers
- all mouth and trousers
- Superficial, engaging in empty, boastful talk, but not of real substance
- bad taste in one's mouth
- A feeling of guilt, responsibility, or embarrassment as to cause nausea
Knowing that I had inadvertently aided a killer, left me with a bad taste in my mouth.
- bad taste in one's mouth
- A feeling of disappointment and frustration
- bad taste in one's mouth
- A feeling something is morally despicable as to cause nausea
The more I thought of my orders, the more it left a bad taste in my mouth.
- big mouth
- a person who has a "big mouth" (sense #1)
Shut up, big mouth!.
- big mouth
- the mouth of someone who talks too much, especially by making exaggerated claims or by inappropriately revealing information
Shut your big mouth or I'll shut it for you.
- born with a silver spoon in one's mouth
- born rich or in a wealthy family
He was born with a silver spoon in his mouth and probably never had to work a day in his life.
- dirty mouth
- The characteristic of regularly using vulgar language or profanity
The comedian lost his gig at the nightclub because he had such a dirty mouth.
- don't look a gift horse in the mouth
- Do not unappreciatively question a gift or handout too closely
- down in the mouth
- Sad or discouraged, especially as indicated by one's facial appearance
He was down in the mouth and low on self-confidence, says his mother, Nina Engel.
- dry mouth
- xerostomia
- foot and mouth
- foot-and-mouth disease
- foot-and-mouth disease
- A highly contagious and sometimes fatal viral disease that can affect animals with cloven hooves
So Joe starts telling the citizen about the foot and mouth disease and the cattle traders and taking action in the matter and the citizen sending them all to the rightabout and Bloom coming out with his sheepdip for the scab and a hoose drench for coughing calves and the guaranteed remedy for timber tongue.
- foot-in-mouth disease
- A tendency to make remarks that are embarrassingly wrong or inappropriate
Maybe you suffer from foot-in-mouth disease, too, at least occasionally. If so, then I expect you've also learned about the remedy.
- hand-to-mouth
- having barely enough to survive, being close to poverty
She has been a widow these six or eight years, and has lived, I imagine, in rather a hand-to-mouth fashion.
- horse's mouth
- Source; someone who directly experienced or witnessed something
- hush one's mouth
- to be quiet; to shut up
- keep one's mouth shut
- To keep a secret; to refrain from speaking indiscreetly or carelessly; broadly, to refrain from speaking altogether
Charles has failed to follow the example of his mother, the queen, who has heroically kept her mouth shut for more than 50 years.
- mouthed
- Simple past tense and past participle of mouth
- mouthed
- Having some specific type of mouth
- mouthful
- Something difficult to pronounce or say
Tony, I'm the executive director of S.H.I.E.L.D., the Strategic Homeland Intelligence, Enforcement, and Logistics Division, explained Fury.Tony nodded. Want a tip? Fire your namer of things, because that's a mouthful..
- mouthful
- The amount that will fit in a mouth
- mouthful
- Quite a bit
- never look a gift horse in the mouth
- Alternative form of don't look a gift horse in the mouth
- open one's big mouth
- To speak about things, when it would be better to stay silent
Grr, why do I always open my big mouth after doing something wrong.
- party in one's mouth
- An exciting combination of flavours
The distinct flavours—sharp, sweet, spicy, and everything in between—began a party in my mouth.
- potty mouth
- The characteristic of regularly using vulgar language, especially strong profanities
Enough of my bathroom humour, my potty mouth.
- potty mouth
- A person having this characteristic
I’ve turned myself into a potty mouth. I swear. Too much.
- put one's foot in one's mouth
- To misspeak; to say something embarrassing or wrong
I really put my foot in my mouth during the interview.
- put one's money where one's mouth is
- To make or take a bet
- put one's money where one's mouth is
- More generally, to take an obvious stake in the truth of a claim that one is making
- put words in somebody's mouth
- To attribute to somebody something he or she did not say; to claim inaccurately that somebody said or intended something
I hope I'm not putting words in your mouth. Did you just tell me to go home early?.
- put words in someone's mouth
- To imply or state that has said a thing; to erect a straw man
- run off at the mouth
- To talk incessantly (about something)
- sea mouth
- That part of a river, estuary or lagoon which broadens out as it meets the sea
- shoot off at the mouth
- To boast, or brag, or talk too much
Don't let Ziegler shoot off at the mouth without our knowledge.
- shoot off at the mouth
- To disclose some information that was supposed to be secret
- shoot one's mouth off
- To make reckless or exaggerated statements
I never shot my mouth off, I was quiet and I listened.
- shut one's mouth
- To stop talking; to be quiet
Why don’t you just shut your mouth? I’m tired of listening to you.
- straight from the horse's mouth
- firsthand; direct; from the source
This is straight from the horse's mouth.
- straight from the horse's mouth
- Directly from the source; firsthand
If you don't believe me, go talk to him and hear it straight from the horse's mouth. It's true.
- trench mouth
- Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis, a severe bacterial infection of the gums, typically characterized by inflammation, bleeding, deep ulceration, necrotized tissue, pain, fever, enlarged lymph nodes, fatigue, and halitosis
Vincent's angina (or trench mouth) is a distinct form of ulcerative gingivitis.
- wash your mouth out
- A phrase uttered after someone has said a swear word
- watch one's mouth
- To be careful about what one says, especially with regard to disrespectful or profane language
- watch one's mouth
- In the imperative form, used as a warning to avoid or stop using inappropriate language, especially profanity, or disrespectful utterances
- word of mouth
- Verbal means of passing of information
The book didn't need any publicity spots, it was a bestseller solely by word of mouth.
- word-of-mouth
- Alternative spelling of word of mouth
- you kiss your mother with that mouth
- Used to indicate that the other person's speech has become too obscene or vulgar
You kiss your mother with that mouth? mocked the man-who-was-ten. Matthew replied, No, but I kiss yours!.
- mouthful
- as much as can be or is usually put into the or exercise
- born with a silver spoon in one's mouth
- (Ev ile ilgili) Born into a wealthy family
- slap the taste out of your mouth
- (Ev ile ilgili) beat the dumb off of you
- slap the taste out of your mouth
- (Ev ile ilgili) try to get someone to stop or not do something that you really do not find appropriate
- mouthed
- {a} furnished with a mouth, borne down by noise
- mouthful
- {a} what the mouth can hold at once
- mouthing
- {n} a grumbling, a speaking full
- born with a silver spoon in your mouth
- (Atasözü) Have a high social position and wealth from birth
- hand-to-mouth
- (deyim) Having or providing only the bare essentials
A hand-to-mouth existence.
- intra oral mouth guard
- Intra oral mouth guards are dental devices worn on the upper or lower teeth. They can be hard or soft, and may cover all or some of the teeth
- make someone's mouth water
- (deyim) Create a desire or appetite in someone; be or seem tasty
- put your foot in your mouth
- (deyim) Say something without thinking carefully, so that you embarrass or upset someone
I’ve really put my foot in it this time. I didn’t realize that was her husband!.
- put your money where your mouth is
- (deyim) Support something that you believe in, especially by giving money
- put your money where your mouth is
- (deyim) Do something rather than to just talk about it
- word of mouth
- Communication by oral rather than written means
The merchant told us that the best customers he had were recommended to him by word of mouth.
- A mouth
- bouche
- A mouth
- bouch
- The mouth
- cakehole
- The mouth
- face
- The mouth
- oral cavity
- The mouth
- mun
- The mouth
- kisser
- The mouth
- gob
- The mouth
- puss
- a mouth
- rosebud
- from mouth to mouth
- from one person to another, by word of mouth
- mouth sores
- mucositis
- mouth sores
- stomatitis
- mouthed
- Furnished with a mouth
- mouthed
- {s} expressed, given voice; taken into the mouth; rubbed or nuzzled with the lips; oral
- mouthed
- past of mouth
- mouthed
- Having a mouth of a particular kind; using the mouth, speech, or voice in a particular way; used only in composition; as, wide-mouthed; hard-mouthed; foul- mouthed; mealy-mouthed
- mouther
- One who mouths; an affected speaker
- mouthful
- As much as is usually put into the mouth at one time
- mouthful
- a small amount eaten or drunk; "take a taste--you'll like it"
- mouthful
- If you describe a long word or phrase as a mouthful, you mean that it is difficult to say. It's called the Pan-Caribbean Disaster Preparedness and Prevention Project, which is quite a mouthful
- mouthful
- {i} sip; bite; quantity which fills the mouth
- mouthful
- the quantity that can be held in the mouth
- mouthful
- Something difficult to pronounce
- mouthful
- A mouthful of drink or food is the amount that you put or have in your mouth. She gulped down a mouthful of coffee
- mouthful
- Hence, a small quantity
- mouthfuls
- plural of mouthful
- mouthing
- present participle of mouth
- mouths
- plural of mouth
- mouths
- third-person singular of mouth
- the mouth
- pecker
- the mouth
- jaws