mouth parched and tongue scorched
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k à UG à NSH é Ji à o, which means to say a lot or to say a lot. It's from Fu Hu Ji by Yuan Jing.
Dry mouth and hot tongue are the same as "dry mouth and dry lips".
Source: the fourth chapter of the story of beheading ghosts by Liu Zhang of Qing Dynasty: "two people think about it, but there is no good way. At the thought of midnight, I was hungry and thirsty. I just asked carefully, "brother, we are hungry. I have a bag of dog dung. How would you like it? "
Chinese PinYin : kǒu gàn shé jiāo
mouth parched and tongue scorched
To teach according to one's ability. liàng néng shòu guān
Don't look at the monk's face, look at the Buddha's face. bù kàn sēng miàn kàn fó miàn
every house deserves a rank of nobility -- there are wise men everywhere. bǐ wū kě fēng
stratagem of " kill him through his way. jiǎ tú miè guó