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? "
mouth parched and tongue scorched
cover up the eyes and ears of others - zhē yǎn ěr mù
the crane screams in the middle marsh - hè míng jiǔ gāo