mouthie
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]mouthie (plural mouthies)
- (childish) A mouth.
- 1865, [Susan Stirling], “At the Ramsays on a Party Day”, in Sedgely Court: A Tale, volume I, Edinburgh, London: William Blackwood and Sons, page 78:
- “[…] what on earth is the matter that your little mouthie is bleeding that way like a sheep?”
- [between 1870 and 1892?], John Blair, “Foreign Poets”, in Collection of Rhymes, &c., Parkhill, Ont.: […] the Gazette Printing House, part II, page 11:
- Closed thine eyes and little mouthie; […]
- 1900 March, “Fingerings”, in The Educational Review, St. John, N.B., page 233, column 1:
- Open wide the little mouthie, / Pop one finger in!
- 1948 December, Cynthia Medley, “Letter To A Friend”, in The Epaulet, volume IX, number 1, the Students of Mary Washington College of the University of Virginia, page 9, column 1:
- After cleaning myself up and wiping her cute little mouthie, she was at it again.
- 1909, Alexander F., Isabel C. Chamberlain, “Studies of a Child. IV. “Meanings” and “Definitions” in the Forty-Seventh and Forty-Eighth Months”, in G[ranville] Stanley Hall, editor, The Pedagogical Seminary: A Quarterly; International Record of Educational Literature, Institutions and Progress, volume XVI, Worcester, Mass.: Florence Chandler, […], page 77:
- You throw ’em and the dogs go and pick ’em up with their mouthies.
- 1989, Daniel Pinkwater, “Psychopathia Snacksualis”, in Fish Whistle: Commentaries, Uncommontaries and Vulgar Excesses, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc., →ISBN, part one (Crack the Whip and Pass the Chips), page 19:
- Putting the lobster in your little mouthie.