词汇 | bite your tongue |
释义 | Idiom bite your tonguebite (your) tongue to stop yourself from saying something because it would be better not to, even if you would like to say it.I really wanted to tell her what I thought of him but I had to bite my tongue. bite (one's) tongue1. Literally, to accidentally pinch one's tongue with one's teeth. My daughter started crying after she bit her tongue. 2. To stop oneself from saying something (often something potentially inappropriate, hurtful, or offensive). I had to bite my tongue as my sister gushed about her new boyfriend yet again. Bite your tongue!Stop talking! An expression of frustration with what someone is saying, often because it is pessimistic. A: "Oh, I don't think I'm going to get the job." B: "Bite your tongue! You don't know that for sure." bite your tongueCOMMON If you bite your tongue, you do not say something that you would like to say. All I can do is to bite my tongue if I want to keep my job. bite your tonguemake a desperate effort to avoid saying something.bite your ˈtonguestop yourself from saying something that might upset somebody or cause an argument, although you want to speak: I didn’t believe her explanation but I bit my tongue. OPPOSITE: give somebody a piece of your mindbite your tongueHope that what you just said doesn’t come true. This imperative is a translation of the Yiddish saying, Bays dir di tsung, and is used in informal conversation. For example, “You think it’ll rain on their outdoor ceremony? Bite your tongue!” A much older but related phrase is to bite one’s tongue, meaning to remain silent when provoked—literally, to hold it between one’s teeth so as to suppress speaking. Shakespeare had it in Henry VI, Part 2 (1.1): “So Yorke must sit, and fret, and bite his tongue.” See also hold one's tongue. |
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