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 mouth [mauθ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 嘴, 口, 口腔, 口状物

vi. 装腔作势说话, 做鬼脸

vt. 说出, 做作地说

[医] 口




    mouth
    [ noun ]
    1. the opening through which food is taken in and vocalizations emerge

    2. <noun.body>
      he stuffed his mouth with candy
    3. the externally visible part of the oral cavity on the face and the system of organs surrounding the opening

    4. <noun.body>
      she wiped lipstick from her mouth
    5. an opening that resembles a mouth (as of a cave or a gorge)

    6. <noun.object>
      he rode into the mouth of the canyon
      they built a fire at the mouth of the cave
    7. the point where a stream issues into a larger body of water

    8. <noun.object>
      New York is at the mouth of the Hudson
    9. a person conceived as a consumer of food

    10. <noun.person>
      he has four mouths to feed
    11. a spokesperson (as a lawyer)

    12. <noun.person>
    13. an impudent or insolent rejoinder

    14. <noun.communication>
      don't give me any of your sass
    15. the opening of a jar or bottle

    16. <noun.artifact>
      the jar had a wide mouth
    [ verb ]
    1. express in speech

    2. <verb.communication> speak talk utter verbalise verbalize
      She talks a lot of nonsense
      This depressed patient does not verbalize
    3. articulate silently; form words with the lips only

    4. <verb.communication>
      She mouthed a swear word
    5. touch with the mouth

    6. <verb.contact>


    Mouth \Mouth\ (mouth), n.; pl. {Mouths} (mou[th]z). [OE. mouth,
    mu[thorn], AS. m[=u][eth]; akin to D. mond, OS. m[=u][eth],
    G. mund, Icel. mu[eth]r, munnr, Sw. mun, Dan. mund, Goth.
    mun[thorn]s, and possibly L. mentum chin; or cf. D. muil
    mouth, muzzle, G. maul, OHG. m[=u]la, Icel. m[=u]li, and Skr.
    mukha mouth.]
    1. 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.

    2. Hence: An opening affording entrance or exit; orifice;
    aperture; as:
    (a) 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.
    (b) The opening or entrance of any cavity, as a cave, pit,
    well, or den.
    (c) The opening of a piece of ordnance, through which it
    is discharged.
    (d) The opening through which the waters of a river or any
    stream are discharged.
    (e) The entrance into a harbor.

    3. (Saddlery) The crosspiece of a bridle bit, which enters
    the mouth of an animal.

    4. A principal speaker; one who utters the common opinion; a
    mouthpiece.

    Every coffeehouse has some particular statesman
    belonging to it, who is the mouth of the street
    where he lives. --Addison.

    5. Cry; voice. [Obs.] --Dryden.

    6. Speech; language; testimony.

    That in the mouth of two or three witnesses every
    word may be established. --Matt. xviii.
    16.

    7. A wry face; a grimace; a mow.

    Counterfeit sad looks,
    Make mouths upon me when I turn my back. --Shak.

    {Down at the mouth} or {Down in the mouth}, chapfallen; of
    dejected countenance; depressed; discouraged. [Obs. or
    Colloq.]

    {Mouth friend}, one who professes friendship insincerely.
    --Shak.

    {Mouth glass}, a small mirror for inspecting the mouth or
    teeth.

    {Mouth honor}, honor given in words, but not felt. --Shak.

    {Mouth organ}. (Mus.)
    (a) Pan's pipes. See {Pandean}.
    (b) An harmonicon.

    {Mouth pipe}, an organ pipe with a lip or plate to cut the
    escaping air and make a sound.

    {To stop the mouth}, to silence or be silent; to put to
    shame; to confound.

    {To put one's foot in one's mouth}, to say something which
    causes one embarrassment.

    {To run off at the mouth}, to speak excessively.

    {To talk out of both sides of one's mouth}, to say things
    which are contradictory.
    [1913 Webster +PJC]

    The mouth of them that speak lies shall be stopped.
    --Ps. lxiii.
    11.

    Whose mouths must be stopped. --Titus i. 11.


    Mouth \Mouth\ (mou[th]), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Mouthed}
    (mou[th]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Mouthing}.]
    1. To take into the mouth; to seize or grind with the mouth
    or teeth; to chew; to devour. --Dryden.

    2. To utter with a voice affectedly big or swelling; to speak
    in a strained or unnaturally sonorous manner; as, mouthing
    platitudes. ``Mouthing big phrases.'' --Hare.

    Mouthing out his hollow oes and aes. --Tennyson.

    3. To form or cleanse with the mouth; to lick, as a bear her
    cub. --Sir T. Browne.

    4. To make mouths at. [R.] --R. Blair.


    Mouth \Mouth\, v. i.
    1. To speak with a full, round, or loud, affected voice; to
    vociferate; to rant.

    I'll bellow out for Rome, and for my country,
    And mouth at C[ae]sar, till I shake the senate.
    --Addison.

    2. To put mouth to mouth; to kiss. [R.] --Shak.

    3. To make grimaces, esp. in ridicule or contempt.

    Well I know, when I am gone,
    How she mouths behind my back. --Tennyson.

    1. Ellin said Almaraz told him he was exposed to AIDS when blood from an AIDS patient squirted into his eyes and mouth during an operation in New York about seven years ago.
    2. "They've got two eyes and a nose and a mouth just like me. These boys have just gone wrong." _ Elizabeth Burke, 85, a resident of Agawam, Mass., speaking about jail inmates who plow and fertilize garden plots for senior citizens.
    3. Heather was suffocated by someone who placed a hand over her mouth, according to police, who said her body was placed in a freezer before it was left in the trash barrel.
    4. It isn't tied down or anything," Bill Gibson, 58, said as he hauled away a 12-foot-long branch that had fallen from a tree next to his undamaged trailer house in Venice, near the mouth of the Mississippi River.
    5. 'It would be wrong to put words into his mouth if they were not correct, but where you have a civil servant giving evidence on behalf of a department, many hands contribute,' he said.
    6. "Camel Wide feels different in your hand and in your mouth." But some industry executives and distributors question the strategy.
    7. To put a child in such a situation "may be sentencing those children to death." Hanlon said Eliana's doctors found no evidence of blood in the mouth, but Eliana would be kept out of class if that occurred.
    8. "Anybody just handling the cartons could be poisoned if they put their hands in their mouth or eye.
    9. Fish caught near the Arctic mouth of Siberia's mighty Ob River reek of oil and are rendered inedible by sludge dumped along the river's more than 1,800-mile path.
    10. Water spouts out of the horse's mouth when the head is rocked.
    11. The Coast Guard made the arrests Sunday after an activist from the environmental group Greenpeace chained herself to a crane on the research vessel Aloha, about a mile off the mouth of the Rogue River at Gold Beach.
    12. Korir then placed the lungs in Jane's mouth, on pretext that he was chasing away the demons." The pastor and his followers then left the girl and continued to pray for her nearby.
    13. The plane disappeared on the last leg of a regularly scheduled flight from the southeastern city of Sao Paulo to Belem, 2,140 miles northwest of Rio at the mouth of the Amazon River, Varig spokesman Gilberto Brito said.
    14. People traditionally using the pure baking soda say it makes their teeth whiter and mouth fresher-feeling.
    15. Aqazadeh repeated Iranian charges that the United States helped Iraq carry out a devastating air raid on Iran's Larak Island oil terminal in the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz May 18. Five tankers were set on fire.
    16. In the front row, near center stage, a woman falls asleep with her mouth wide open.
    17. Assuming the next Congress puts its money where this Congress put its mouth, the U.S. might at last be on track to deal successfully with drug addiction.
    18. The first salvo, a letter sent by an employee in a graphics unit, thanked Ms. Schleuning "for your deeply thoughtful and perceptive letter," and included a photograph of a naked East African boy with his mouth pressed against the backside of a cow.
    19. A Coast Guard helicopter had to abandon plans to rescue four men on work barges trapped at the mouth of the Mississippi River, said Coast Guard spokesman Dan Dewell.
    20. Both films have had some favorable reviews and are expected to benefit from strong word of mouth.
    21. The mouth of Tokyo Bay is known for its congestion of military vessels, including U.S. naval ships, ocean-going vessels, ferries, fishing boats and privately owned yachts and sightseeing boats.
    22. She is the runaway from the boonies who has met advanced artists and performers and has learned to mouth their lingo.
    23. Marijuana smoking was the common link among a number of otherwise healthy young people who developed large, fast-growing cancerous tumors of the mouth and neck, two doctors reported.
    24. Burt Reynolds is putting his mouth where his money is with more appearances on the syndicated game show he helped create, "Win, Lose or Draw.
    25. The basic snack-chip market remains "anyone with a mouth," says Mr. Davis.
    26. With her long auburn hair, Raphael-like face, wide mouth and all-knowing eyes, she is a stunner, off-screen and on.
    27. 'We are not going to let our mouth get ahead of our tummy and buy something in Ohio.
    28. Sales are generated by word of mouth and advertising in specialist magazines such as The Grower and The Grape Press.
    29. "He had a loud mouth, and they may have just had enough of him," said one administration analyst.
    30. Wellcome of the UK has an experimental compound aimed at a different enzyme, which would be taken by mouth.
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