Cat got your tongue?
This is a shortened way of saying: Has the cat got your tongue?
Meaning
This idiom can mean the
following:
·
Have you nothing
to say?
·
Why are you not
talking?
·
Why are you not
saying anything?
·
Why don’t you
answer me?
The idiom is used to compel
someone to speak, say something, or give a response when they are (unusually)
quiet. It is often said by adults to children. When someone is speechless or
without words (sometimes out of surprise) you will say “Cat got your tongue?”
to prompt them to react. This idiom is often accompanied by “What’s the matter”
at the beginning of it.
·
What’s the
matter, cat got your tongue?
(What’s the
matter? = What is the problem?)
This idiom can
also be used as a normal sentence and not just as a question.
·
I think the cat
has his tongue.
Why
do people say Cat got your tongue?
Origin
Well, nobody
really knows the true origin of this idiom though if you think about it, if a
cat has run away with your tongue, you probably wouldn’t be able to say
anything. It would be a reason why you are not speaking or quiet.
Cat
got your thumbs?
With the more digital
generation that communicates a lot via the internet, they have modified this
expression and sometimes say: Cat got your thumbs? It is used when someone
doesn’t respond to a message or text via chat or other forms of instant written
communication, especially when they suddenly stop replying in a text-based
conversation.
The meaning is also similar:
Has the cat got your tongue = Why have you stopped talking? Why don’t you say something?
Has the cat got your thumbs = Why have you stopped writing? Why don’t you write something?
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