0 the opening in the face of a person or animal, consisting of the lips and the space between them, or the space behind containing the teeth and the tongue: --
1 the opening of a narrow container, the opening of a hole or cave, or the place where a river flows into the sea: --
Quebec is at the mouth of the St Lawrence River.
3 the opening in the face used by a person or animal to eat and drink: --
And openness was explicitly linked to articulation, inasmuch as one "opened oneself" to the extent that one opened one's mouth.
Generally, the masks are not pierced at the eyes, nose, or mouth.
It is the mouth part which enters the mucosa and the worm obtains nutrition from the host tissue.
The main dominance characteristics of rediae included large size, possession of a mouth and a muscular pharynx.
The deep draught estuary was easy to defend since it had a narrow mouth surrounded by mountains.
However, they would be promoted by word of mouth and the credibility of the worker.
Novelists and dramatists put hitherto taboo dialogue into the mouths of characters whose real counterparts would be unlikely to use it.
In bottle feeding the tongue compresses the teat against the roof of the mouth.