Definition of "mouth"
mouth
noun
plural mouths
(anatomy) The opening of a creature through which food is ingested.
Quotations
I made a speaking trumpet of my hands and commenced to whoop “Ahoy!” and “Hello!” at the top of my lungs. […] The Colonel woke up, and, after asking what in brimstone was the matter, opened his mouth and roared “Hi!” and “Hello!” like the bull of Bashan.
1913, Joseph C. Lincoln, chapter 7, in Mr. Pratt's Patients
(obsolete) A principal speaker; one who utters the common opinion; a mouthpiece.
Quotations
Every coffeehouse has some particular statesman belonging to it, who is the mouth of the street where he lives.
1712 June 23 (Gregorian calendar), [Joseph Addison; Richard Steele et al.], “THURSDAY, June 12, 1712”, in The Spectator, number 403; republished in Alexander Chalmers, editor, The Spectator; a New Edition, […], volume IV, New York, N.Y.: D[aniel] Appleton & Company, 1853
(obsolete) A wry face; a grimace; a mow.
Quotations
Counterfeit sad looks, / Make mouths upon me when I turn my back.
c. 1595–1596 (date written), William Shakespeare, “A Midsommer Nights Dreame”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies: Published According to the True Originall Copies (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, [Act III, scene ii]
verb
third-person singular simple present mouths, present participle mouthing, simple past and past participle mouthed
Quotations
There was also a close temporal contiguity between "smiling" or other "emotional" grimaces and mouthing and tonguing movements, so that it was often difficult to distinguish between mouthing and smiling.
1987, Peter H. Wolff, The Development of Behavioral States and the Expression of Emotions in Early Infancy, page 15
(transitive, intransitive) To utter with a voice that is overly loud or swelling.
Quotations
Those who endeavor to become eloquent by mere imitation of some celebrated model—an actor for instance—often attempt to gain this quality by altering their voice in an unnatural manner. Such a process never produces any thing but mouthing.
1846, Erasmus Darwin North, Practical Speaking: As Taught in Yale College, page 123
To exit at a mouth (such as a river mouth)
Quotations
In this part of the address the position of the principal hanging-valleys was indicated , and it was pointed out that there were two sets, namely those which mouthed into valleys that had been deepened in softer rocks, and those which mouthed into portions of main valleys that had been deepened along shatter-bolts.
1906, Philosophical Magazine, page 96
(transitive) To pick up or handle with the lips or mouth, but not chew or swallow.
Quotations
She alighted and mouthed over several within a small space and a short time; and these buds were not at the bottom of the hedge; nor was she searching for a nest-site.
1887 September, Charles Robson, “Natural History Jottings: On Wasps, chiefly”, in Mordecai Cubitt Cooke, John Eller Taylor, editors, Hardwicke's Science-gossip, number 273, page 210
His manner of feeding was curious, any fish he was provided with not being snapped up immediately, but played with and mouthed all over for a quarter of an hour or more, when it suddenly disappeared as if by magic.
1889, Francis Henry Hill Guillemard, The Cruise of the Marchesa to Kamschatka & New Guinea, page 165
Quotations
But active as this old professor of the dance was, he had when a child in Paris, in 1793, seen Marie Antoinette on the way to the scaffold, and described the unfortunate queen, with her gray hair cut short, her hands tied, seated in the cart, still retaining her calm demeanour as the mob shouted and mouthed around her .
1883, Lord Ronald Sutherland Gower, My Reminiscences - Volume 1, page 148
(sheep husbandry) To examine the teeth of.
Quotations
No information could be found on the relationship between the productivity of ewes and the states of their mouths. While there is no doubt that the practice of “mouthing" ewes is founded on experience, the traditional standards may require modification since the adoption almost exclusively of grassland farming, particularly in the North Island.
1957, The New Zealand Journal of Science and Technology, page 587