tongue (n.)
"lingual apparatus and principal organ of taste," Old English tunge "tongue, organ of speech; speech, faculty or mode of speech, a people's language," from Proto-Germanic *tungō (source also of Old Saxon and Old Norse tunga, Old Frisian tunge, Middle Dutch tonghe, Dutch tong, Old High German zunga, German Zunge, Gothic tuggo), from PIE root *dnghu- "tongue."
By normal evolution in Modern English it would be *tung. For substitution of -o- for -u-, see come. The spelling of the ending of the word apparently is a 14c. attempt to indicate proper pronunciation of the -g-, but the result is "neither etymological nor phonetic, and is only in a very small degree historical" [OED, 1989].
As "beef's tongue served as food," early 15c. Also extended to any object or process resembling a tongue, as "long, narrow spit of land into the sea: (1560s, for these senses see tongs, tang).
In the "knowledge of a foreign language" sense in the Pentecostal miracle, from 1520s. In 16c.-16c. in the classical revival the Tongues (or the Three Tongues) were Hebrew, Greek, Latin.
Tongue-work meant "philological research and labor" (1590s) before it meant "debate, discussion" (1660s). To hold (one's) tongue "refrain from speaking" was in Old English; bite (one's) tongue "refrain from speaking" is by 1590s. Tonguepad "A great talker" [Johnson] is slang attested from 1700.
Bewar of tungis double and deceyuable,
Which with ther venym infect ech companye,
Ther poynaunt poisoun is so penetrable.
[John Lydgate, Fall of Princes (c. 1439)]
tongue (v.)
"to touch with the tongue, lick," 1680s, from tongue (n.). In reference to playing on musical instruments, by 1936. Related: Tongued; tonguing.
Earlier it meant "drive out by order or reproach" (late 14c., tungen); in 19c. slang to tongue-bang was to "scold heartily," hence tongue-banger "scold." To tongue it (1620s) was 17c. colloquial for "talk volubly."
Lowell in 19c. has tonguey (adj.) "talkative," which was anticipated by Wycliffe's 14c. tongi (adj.) "talkative, loquacious," translating Latin linguosus.
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Dictionary entries near tongue
toned
toner
Tong
Tonga
tongs
tongue
tongued
tongue-in-cheek
tongue-lash
tongueless
tongue-tied