The Use Of
Tongue
Tongue
The
tongue is always wet, because God made it so, for water, fluid and saliva to be
coming out of it. The texture of the
tongue is different from the texture of the skin. For example, the skin is
soft, but the tongue is soft and tough.
You
drink, retain and emit water and fluid through the tongue and mouth. You retain
saliva in the mouth or swallow it, to keep your body and tongue hydrated, wet.
If your
tongue is not wet enough, you shall not be singing very well, because the
tongue is not then flexible enough. You throat and voice shall be cracking.
Your tongue would seem to be frozen and hardened. It will not be vibrating
enough.
The
tongue does not stop in the mouth. It extends down the throat and esophagus. It is long. The lengthy side
helps it absorb water from the stomach.
Without
the water absorbed in the tongue, a person will not be able to have taste. He
will not be able to taste foods and drinks. If the tongue were not wet, what a
person is eating shall not be able to spread over the tongue and permeate into
it.
When you
are very thirsty, and you go to drink wine, malt or mineral, you discover that
the drink does not satisfy your needs. The tongue tells you that it is not
wine, malt or mineral that is needed by the body. You continue to fell thirsty
until you drink water. Usually, a person says whether he wants to drink water
or wine. The tongue makes a person to
know when the water content of the body is below the needed level or quantity.
You use
the tongue to taste what you are baking or cooking. Therefore, the tongue needs
to contain water, to be wet, always. The tongue helps the mouth to melt, mix
and spread what you are eating or drinking.
When you
want to spit something out, the tongue helps you to do so. The saliva helps you
and also the air helps you. To spit out, you first breathe in enough air, to
have enough pressure inside your body. The pressure helps you to make your
tongue stiff enough, for you to be able to spit or vomit. The muscles help by
expanding and contracting.
The
tongue, hands and legs are tall, long.
The
tongue helps you to know whether what you have eaten or drank is good for the
body. Therefore, the works of the tongue are to taste foods and drinks, to
absorb water and to make the mouth wet.
The
tongue does the work of medical laboratory, to find out what is needed by the
body or not.
The
tongue differentiates one taste from another.
It is the saliva that helps the tongue to do it work very well. The tongue
emits saliva in the form of foam, in order to reduce the amount of water being
released by the body through the tongue.