Mush. Slang for your mouth, i.e. shut your mush.
On this page you'll find 5 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to shut your mouth, such as: hold your tongue, hush, not another peep, and say nothing.
(STOP TALKING)
to stop talking or making a noise, or to make a person or animal stop making noise: I wish you'd shut up and listen. Shut up!
But some context might be helpful. "Keep your mouth shut" is a very rude, often aggressive or threatening way of telling someone to stop talking, or to not say anything (maybe about a particular subject).
Another common variation is "shut your mouth", sometimes substituting "mouth" with another word conveying similar meaning, such as head, face, teeth, trap, yap, chops, crunch, cake-hole (in places including the UK and New Zealand), pie-hole (in the United States), or, more archaically, gob.
It is generally considered rude to tell someone to shut up. Even if you phrase it more politely, they may still take offense as people believe they have the right to speak when they feel like it. Yet there are certain situations where it is fully justified and could save both your lives.
Back in the 1400s, shut up was a verb phrase meaning “to secure something away in a receptacle.” By the 1500s, shut up had evolved to variously mean “confine someone,” “close a door or window,” or “bring to a conclusion.”
Shut up is a verb phrase that means to stop talking, to imprison, or to close something tightly. Informally, to shut up is to not say anything else. In this sense, shut up is commonly considered a rude way to request someone else stop talking.
Hunky-dory: Use this to describe when something is OK, cool, normal or "all good." ("Everything is hunky-dory over here!")
Veg-out – is slang for relaxing. As a student, you'll want to veg-out every time an essay has been submitted. To veg-out properly you have to order pizza and find a really naff movie to watch in your jim-jams.
shut | American Dictionary
to close something: [ T ] Would you shut the door, please? [ I ] I can't get this window shut.
... восемь часов. (... vosem' chasov.)
o.k. {adverb}
все в порядке {adv.}
For example, if my husband tells me to "shut up," this could be a sign that he does not value what I'm saying. Even in the throes of an argument, your partner should not be telling you to shut up. Instead, they should be using kinder and more constructive language throughout.
'Innit? ' is a contraction of the tag question 'Isn't it? ' and people use it to prompt a response from the listener. So if someone says 'Nice weather, innit?
I don't care is often rude in British English. We'd say 'I don't mind'.
'Lass' or 'lassie' is another word for 'girl'. This is mainly in the north of England and Scotland. 'Lad' is another word for boy.
It is used in a variety of ways, including as a term of disparagement. "Cunt" is often used as a disparaging and obscene term for a woman in the United States, an unpleasant or stupid man or woman in the United Kingdom, or a contemptible man in Australia and New Zealand.