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Mother tongue   /mˈəðər təŋ/   Listen
adjective
Mother  adj.  Received by birth or from ancestors; native, natural; as, mother language; also acting the part, or having the place of a mother; producing others; originating. "It is the mother falsehood from which all idolatry is derived."
Mother cell (Biol.), a cell which, by endogenous divisions, gives rise to other cells (daughter cells); a parent cell.
Mother church, the original church; a church from which other churches have sprung; as, the mother church of a diocese.
Mother country, the country of one's parents or ancestors; the country from which the people of a colony derive their origin.
Mother liquor (Chem.), the impure or complex residual solution which remains after the salts readily or regularly crystallizing have been removed.
Mother queen, the mother of a reigning sovereign; a queen mother.
Mother tongue.
(a)
A language from which another language has had its origin.
(b)
The language of one's native land; native tongue.
Mother water. See Mother liquor (above).
Mother wit, natural or native wit or intelligence.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Mother tongue" Quotes from Famous Books



... business in his own vernacular. He thinks and calculates better in French. Frequently when you engage him in conversation in English and the question of business comes up, you find that he instinctively lapses into his mother tongue. ...
— The War After the War • Isaac Frederick Marcosson

... daddy, and they were richt weel made," replied the lad, whose mode of speech was entirely different from his grandfather's: the latter had learned English as a foreign language, but could not speak Scotch, his mother tongue being Gaelic. ...
— Malcolm • George MacDonald

... clothes enough in August to melt them. Nobody would have guessed from Bob's presentation now that he had ever been aloft on a dark night in the Atlantic, or knew the hundred ingenuities that could be performed with a rope's end and a marline-spike as well as his mother tongue. ...
— The Trumpet-Major • Thomas Hardy

... ambition had been to see her son's name among the long list of clergymen of the family who had been ministers to the neighboring church of Stentrohult. She finally yielded, and the best possible use was made by Linnaeus of Dr. Rothman's tuition. Latin, then the mother tongue of all scientists and scholars, he wrote ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 633, February 18, 1888 • Various

... whose force he felt to be telling on himself, from making any world for his thought in the minds of others—like a poet among people of a strange speech, who may have a poetry of their own, but have no ear for his cadence, no answering thrill to his discovery of the latent virtues in his mother tongue. ...
— Daniel Deronda • George Eliot


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