whip out
拨出,鞭打,鞭打着,鞭打的时候
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
whipped or whipt, whip·ping.
- : to beat with a strap, lash, rod, or the like, especially by way of punishment or chastisement; flog; thrash: Criminals used to be whipped for minor offenses.
- : to strike with quick, repeated strokes of something slender and flexible; lash: He impatiently whipped his leg with his riding crop.
- : to urge or force on with, or as with, a lash, rod, etc.
- : to lash or castigate with words.
- : to train or organize forcefully: to whip the team into shape.
- : Informal. to defeat or overcome: to whip the opposition; to whip a bad habit.
- : to hoist or haul by means of a whip.
- : to move quickly and suddenly; pull, jerk, seize, or the like, with a sudden movement: He whipped his gun out of its holster.
- : to fish with rod and line, especially by making repeated casts: I whipped the stream all day and caught nothing.
- : to beat to a froth with an eggbeater, whisk, fork, or other implement in order to mix in air and cause expansion.
- : to overlay or cover with cord, thread, or the like wound about it: to whip the end of a hawser.
- : to wind about something: The tailor whipped the seams with heavy thread.
- : to sew with a light overcasting stitch.
- 1
whipped or whipt, whip·ping.
- : to move or go quickly and suddenly; dart; whisk: She whipped into the store for some milk.
- : to beat or lash about, as a pennant in the wind.
- : to fish with rod and line, especially by casting the line frequently.
- 1
- : an instrument for striking, as in driving animals or in punishing, typically consisting of a lash or other flexible part with a more rigid handle.
- : a whipping or lashing stroke or motion.
- : a utensil for whipping; whisk.
- : a dish made of cream or egg whites whipped to a froth with flavoring, often with fruit pulp or the like: prune whip.
- : Politics. a party manager in a legislative body who secures attendance for voting and directs other members. a written call made on members of a party to be in attendance for voting.
- : a windmill vane.
- : Hunting. a whipper-in.
- : a tackle consisting of a fall rove through a single standing block so as to change the direction of hauling with no mechanical advantage, or consisting of a fall secured at one end and rove through a single running and a single standing block so as to change the direction of hauling with a mechanical advantage of two, neglecting friction.Compare gun tackle.
- : the wrapping around the end of a whipped cord or the like.
- : Also called whirl .Machinery. eccentric rotation of a shaft having its center line slightly curved between supporting bearings.
- : a branchless shoot of a woody plant, especially one resulting from the first year's growth of a bud or graft.
- : Chiefly British. a person who uses a whip as part of his or her work, as a driver of horses or a coachman.
- 1
- : whip in, Hunting. to prevent from wandering, as hounds.
- : whip off, Informal. to write hurriedly: He whipped off three new songs last night.
- : whip up, Informal. to plan or assemble quickly: to whip up a delicious dinner.to incite; arouse; stir: to whip up the mob.
Phrases
- whip up
- crack the whip
- lick (whip) into shape
- smart as a whip
- upper (whip) hand
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
When the farmers decided the boys were not working hard enough, they “were beaten with whips and tree branches.”
Today, range is king—the contemporary measurement of choice is how far your whip can go on a single charge.
Lee was whip smart, could be charming when he wanted to and preferred to operate behind the scenes.
Her transformation into a soldier — buying a horse and a saddle and a bridle and a whip — takes up half a stanza.
“I just think she’s been tested on the national stage … and she’s whip smart,” says Caraway in the latest episode of The Carlos Watson Show, hosted by the OZY co-founder and CEO.
Again, I do not know House Majority Whip Scalise or President Obama personally.
Just a week before the start of a new Congress, the new House majority whip is fighting for his political life.
Given how little time they had to whip this project to the finish line, they accomplished a lot.
What he may lack in leadership or due diligence skills, he makes up for in his abilities to whip the media into subservience.
And then you'd whip out your iPhone and pull up that snarky tweet your friend wrote linking to the E!
Q was a Queen, who wore a silk slip; R was a Robber, and wanted a whip.
And that was he also in kilts, at the age of five, wearing long curls and holding a whip in his hand.
As commander-in-chief, Bonaparte, for the time being, held the whip hand and could show his dislike by severe reprimands.
The memory of the hawk-nosed, steel-eyed officer who rode from Kurnaul to Meerut in twenty-four hours smote him like a whip.
She gave him a cavalier little nod, touched her horse with the whip, and a moment later was lost in a cloud of dust.