Mouthpiece in a sentence as a noun

I think he cares more about it being on the Kindle and the Fire than using it as his mouthpiece.

So why the bizarre attacks, why act like a Government mouthpiece rather than a journalist?

The NYT is and has been for some time, a mouthpiece for the sitting administration in Washington.

Then send a combination of 2600hz and 2400hz through the mouthpiece to put the trunk on the USA side into a kind of command mode.

The term referred to the mouthpiece for a telephone between 1929 and ~1878, and from ~1878 until 1683, it described ear trumpets.

Unfortunately twitter, tumbler, etc gives idiots a loud mouthpiece for things like this when previously they would have just been ignored.

A paid mouthpiece saying something false in order to mislead Congress into doing what his paymasters want seems like a serious issue to me.

I also take issue with this Editorial and agree with the EFF, but this... a mouthpiece for the sitting administration in Washington.

One who occupies it, shuts the door behind him, and pays the toll that permits him to place a call is surely entitled to assume that the words he utters into the mouthpiece will not be broadcast to the world.

Mouthpiece definitions

noun

a part that goes over or into the mouth of a person; "the mouthpiece of a respirator"

noun

an acoustic device; the part of a telephone into which a person speaks

noun

a spokesperson (as a lawyer)

See also: mouth

noun

(especially boxing) equipment that protects an athlete's mouth

See also: gumshield

noun

the tube of a pipe or cigarette holder that a smoker holds in the mouth

noun

the aperture of a wind instrument into which the player blows directly

See also: embouchure