Meaning of 'Hand to mouth'
What does the saying 'Hand to mouth' mean?
Idiom: Hand to mouth
Meaning:
Someone who's living from hand to mouth, is very poor and needs the little money they have coming in to cover their expenses.
Country: International English |
Subject Area: Body and bodily functions |
Usage Type: Both or All Words Used
All idioms have been editorially reviewed. Submitted idioms may have been edited for correctness and completeness.
« Previous: Hand that rocks the cradle
Next: Hands down »
Similar Idioms
- By word of mouth
- Bird in the hand is worth two in the bush
- With a heavy hand
- Hand in glove
- Upper hand
- Word of mouth
- Off-hand
- Sleight of hand
- Bad taste in your mouth
- From the horse's mouth
- Born with a silver spoon in your mouth
- Left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing
- Butter wouldn't melt in their mouth
- All mouth and trousers
- Put your hand on your heart
- Heart in your mouth
- Put your money where your mouth is
- Put your foot in your mouth
- Hand that rocks the cradle
- Down in the mouth
- Run your mouth off
- Like the back of your hand
- Give me a hand
- Out of hand
- Go hand in hand
- Make money hand over fist
- Caught with your hand in the cookie jar
- Close at hand
- Good hand
- Bad mouth
- Hand in hand
- Give a big hand
- Foam at the mouth
- Cap in hand
- Out of both sides of your mouth
- Can't see your hand in front of your face
- In the palm of your hand
- Try your hand at
- Don't look a gift horse in the mouth
- One hand washes the other
- Don't bite the hand that feeds
- Foot in mouth
- Close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades
Idiom eBooks from UsingEnglish.com
Explore our collection of idiom eBooks to deepen your understanding of English expressions. Download curated lists of idioms in PDF format - ideal for offline study or classroom use!
Know of an idiom that’s missing? Suggest an idiom using our online form.
See also:
- View examples in Google: Hand to mouth
- Idiom Quizzes