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whipped up

/wip, hwip/US // wɪp, ʰwɪp //UK // (wɪp) //

形成了,形成的,形成了的,形成

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 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.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 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.
n.名词 noun
  1. 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. 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.