,noun, verb tongued, tongu⋅ing.| 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. |
| 2. | Zoology. an analogous organ in invertebrate animals. |
| 3. | the tongue of an animal, as an ox, beef, or sheep, used for food, often prepared by smoking or pickling. |
| 4. | the human tongue as the organ of speech: No tongue must ever tell the secret. |
| 5. | the faculty or power of speech: a sight no tongue can describe. |
| 6. | speech or talk, esp. mere glib or empty talk. |
| 7. | manner or character of speech: a flattering tongue. |
| 8. | the language of a particular people, region, or nation: the Hebrew tongue. |
| 9. | a dialect. |
| 10. | (in the Bible) a people or nation distinguished by its language. |
| 11. | tongues, speech, often incomprehensible, typically uttered during moments of religious ecstasy. Compare speaking in tongues, glossolalia. |
| 12. | an object that resembles an animal's tongue in shape, position, or function. |
| 13. | a strip of leather or other material under the lacing or fastening of a shoe. |
| 14. | a piece of metal suspended inside a bell that strikes against the side producing a sound; clapper. |
| 15. | 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. |
| 16. | the pole extending from a carriage or other vehicle between the animals drawing it. |
| 17. | a projecting strip along the center of the edge or end of a board, for fitting into a groove in another board. |
| 18. | a narrow strip of land extending into a body of water; cape. |
| 19. | a section of ice projecting outward from the submerged part of an iceberg. |
| 20. | Machinery. a long, narrow projection on a machine. |
| 21. | 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. |
| 22. | the pin of a buckle, brooch, etc. |
| 23. | to articulate (tones played on a clarinet, trumpet, etc.) by strokes of the tongue. |
| 24. | Carpentry.
|
| 25. | to touch with the tongue. |
| 26. | to articulate or pronounce. |
| 27. | Archaic.
|
| 28. | to tongue tones played on a clarinet, trumpet, etc. |
| 29. | to talk, esp. idly or foolishly; chatter; prate. |
| 30. | to project like a tongue. |
| 31. | find one's tongue, to regain one's powers of speech; recover one's poise: She wanted to say something, but couldn't find her tongue. |
| 32. | give tongue,
|
| 33. | hold one's tongue, to refrain from or cease speaking; keep silent. |
| 34. | lose one's tongue, to lose the power of speech, esp. temporarily. |
| 35. | on the tip of one's (or the) tongue,
|
| 36. | slip of the tongue, a mistake in speaking, as an inadvertent remark. |
| 37. | (with) tongue in cheek, ironically or mockingly; insincerely. |

| a river in N Wyoming and SE Montana, flowing NE from the Bighorn Mountains to the Yellowstone River. 265 mi. (426 km) long. |
tongue (tŭng)
n.
A mobile mass of muscular tissue that is covered with mucous membrane, occupies much of the cavity of the mouth, forms part of its floor, bears the organ of taste, and assists in chewing, swallowing, and speech.
tongue
In addition to the idioms beginning with tongue, also see 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).