Sentences with Tongue, Sentences about Tongue
1. Hold your tongue!
2. Mary stuck her tongue out.
3. A honey tongue, a heart of gall.
4. Be slow of tongue and quick of eye.
5. The word is on the tip of my tongue.
6. A fool’s tongue runs before his wit.
7. Better the foot slip than the tongue.
8. The dip was so hot, it burned my tongue.
9. What the heart thinks the tongue speaks.
10. The tongue of idle persons is never idle.
11. I wish my horse had the speed of your tongue.
12. He knows much who knows how to hold his tongue.
13. He cannot speak well that cannot hold his tongue.
14. An ox is taken by the horns, and a man by the tongue.
15. Go put your creed into the deed. Nor speak with double tongue.
16. I’ll keep peace at all cost, even if I choke to death on my tongue.
17. Nature gave us one tongue and two ears so we could hear twice as much as we speak.
18. My tongue will tell the anger of my heart, or else my heart concealing it will break.
19. When men and woman die, as poets sung, his heart’s the last part moves, her last, the tongue.
20. The best time for you to hold your tongue is the time you feel you must say something or bust.
21. It is a sad thing when men have neither the wit to speak well nor the judgment to hold their tongues.
22. Men are born with two eyes, but with one tongue, in order that they should see twice as much as they say.
23. Constant repetition of tongue-twisters was like lifting weights for me, but patience and persistence have paid off.
24. And this, our life, exempt from public haunt, finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in everything.
25. I cut off his fingers to get him to talk, and when he’d confessed everything I wanted to hear, I had his fucking tongue cut out, and the stump cauterized.
26. And this our life, exempt from public haunt, finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in everything. I would not change it.
27. I wake up every morning in a cold sweat, regardless of how well things went the day before. And put that I said that in a somewhat but not completely tongue-in-cheek way.
28. Put a bridle on thy tongue set a guard before thy lips, lest the words of thine own mouth destroy thy peace… on much speaking cometh repentance, but in silence is safety.
29. Some men know that a light touch of the tongue, running from a woman’s toes to her ears, lingering in the softest way possible in various places in between, given often enough and sincerely enough, would add immeasurably to world peace.
30. When I was younger, I was terrified to express anger because it would often kick-start a horrible reaction in the men in my life. So I bit my tongue. I was left to painstakingly deal with the aftermath of my avoidance later in life, in therapy or through the lyrics of my songs.