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glJfe with one's tongue in one's cheek H$l]Jfe too none too ^Ji+# ; — ,lrJt!l>F (The
weather was none too promising, fi" ^ >tt :T> Jiffiif ° ) tool • a bad workman blames
his tools 1 WORKMAN to down tools fi DOWN tooth armed to the teeth B, ...
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Chabers 21st Century Dictionary
with one's tongue in one's cheek or tongue in cheek with ironic, insincere or
humorous intention. © Anglo-Saxon tunge. tongue-and-groove joint t> noun a
joint made between two pieces of wood, etc consisting of a projection along the
side of ...
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Chambers Pocket Dictionary
(with one's) tongue in (one's) cheek with ironic, insincere or humorous intention. [
OE tunge] tongue-tie n a speech impediment which is caused by an abnormally
small fold of skin under the tongue not allowing full movement of the tongue, ...
Elaine Higgleton, Howard Sargeant, Anne Seaton, 1992
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Textbook on Legal Language and Legal Writing
With one's tongue in one's cheek: To intend to convey one meaning while
actually expressing another. Down in the mouth: Low-spirited; discouraged. From
mouth to mouth: From one person to another, as scandal or rumour spreads from
lip to ...
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Multi-Functional English-Chinese Dictionary
Phrase: with (one's) tongue in (one's) cheek wJS^P^ dai wa ku kou wen Example
: He made the soft soap with tongue in cheek. i^i^i^wMMnM^lo ta shuo hao hua
shl dai wa ku kou wen de. Phrase: with one's tongue hanging out M ke Example:
...
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Metaphor and Corpus Linguistics
In this interaction, an expression devel— ops a meaning through metonymy, a
meaning that is then mapped metaphor— ically onto another domain. Goossens'
examples include say something with one's tongue in one's cheek ...
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IF I CAN YOU CAN LEARN ENGLISH TOO!
To speak with one's tongue in one's cheek: To speak ironically. One should not
take his words seriously because he usually speaks with his tongue in his cheeks
. To keep one's tongue still: To keep quiet. The teacher told her pupils to keep ...
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Embodiment Via Body Parts: Studies from Various Languages ...
反唇相讥 fan-chun xiang-ji (reverse-lips prt-ridicule) 'answer back sarcastically'
zuichun you-hua (lips greasy-slippery) 'eloquent in speech; with one's tongue in
one's cheek' nan-yi qi-chi (difficult-to open-teeth) '(find it) difficult to talk about sth.
Zouheir A. Maalej, Ning Yu, 2011
... he had chosen for himself, might have made much fame by his humorous
sketches. , Mr. ROBERTS asked whether Professor Paterson would distinguish
between "speaking with one's tongue in one's cheek ” and “ laughing in one's
sleeve ?
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Cognitive Linguistics: Internal Dynamics and ...
Goossens (1990) has aptly studied this and similar body-part expressions (e.g.
speak with one's tongue in one's cheek, be closed-lipped) as cases of metaphor
derived from metonymy. In Goossen's view, the metonymic basis of beat one's ...
M. Sandra Peña Cervel, Francisco J. Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez, 2005