When "the cat has your tongue", that means that you can't or aren't saying anything.
what is a idiom about a cat
Someone with an oily tongue is a "smooth" talker who's trying to con you into doing something.
Do you mean cat got your tongue? If so that means you are not speaking.
It means he speaks in a foreign language.
The origin of the idiom "cat got your tongue" is not definitively known. It is believed to come from a retained belief in the Middle Ages that cats could steal a person's breath, rendering them speechless. Over time, the phrase evolved to signify being at a loss for words or unable to speak.
The idiom "tip of my tongue" refers to the feeling of almost remembering something but not being able to recall it fully. It conveys the sensation of the word or information being just out of reach in one's memory.
Nothing. The phrase is tongue in cheek, as if you were talking with your tongue twisted into your cheek instead of in the middle of your mouth. Tongue in cheek means you are not speaking seriously, but in jest.
"Hold your tongue" means don't just say what comes to mind - or think before you talk.
"The cat's got my tongue" is a way of saying "I don't know what to say." People will often ask it if the other person in the conversation seems tongue-tied.
This is not an idiom. When you see AS ___ AS ___ you have A Simile. The correct simile is "on the tip of his tongue."
In band it means to make notes sharper by "tounging" your instraument.
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