What is the meaning of WHISTLE. Phrases containing WHISTLE
See meanings and uses of WHISTLE!Slangs & AI meanings
Engineer blows one long and three short blasts for the brakeman to protect rear of train
Whistle (term used especially in the South)
whistled
 Suit (Cockney Rhyming slang)
A plastic tampon inserter that’s washed up on the beach. Example: “Making a sandcastle is more fun if you decorate it with beach whistles.
Whistle bait is slang for an attractive girl or woman.
Suit. He bought himself a new whistle for the wedding.
Personalized technique of blowing a locomotive whistle, applicable only in the days before the whistles became standardized
Blow job, to suck a penis. [that cute cop in the park is going to find his whistle being blown if he keep hanging around will all the gay kids.]
From that African language that all it is is clicks and whistles
Stomach aches associated with diarrhoea; "Those green apples I ate are giving me the whistle belly thumps."
Bells and whistles is slang for embellishments, gimmicks.
Whistle (shortened from whistle and flute) is London Cockney rhyming slang for suit.
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n.
The moosewood, or striped maple. See Maple.
n.
The ring ousel.
n.
The American golden-eye.
v. t.
To send, signal, or call by a whistle.
v. i.
The mouth and throat; -- so called as being the organs of whistling.
imp. & p. p.
of Whistle
n.
A call by the boatswain's whistle.
v. i.
The shrill sound made by wind passing among trees or through crevices, or that made by bullet, or the like, passing rapidly through the air; the shrill noise (much used as a signal, etc.) made by steam or gas escaping through a small orifice, or impinging against the edge of a metallic bell or cup.
v. i.
A sharp, shrill, more or less musical sound, made by forcing the breath through a small orifice of the lips, or through or instrument which gives a similar sound; the sound used by a sportsman in calling his dogs; the shrill note of a bird; as, the sharp whistle of a boy, or of a boatswain's pipe; the blackbird's mellow whistle.
v. i.
An instrument in which gas or steam forced into a cavity, or against a thin edge, produces a sound more or less like that made by one who whistles through the compressed lips; as, a child's whistle; a boatswain's whistle; a steam whistle (see Steam whistle, under Steam).
n.
The widgeon.
n.
The whistlefish.
n.
A gossat, or rockling; -- called also whistler, three-bearded rockling, sea loach, and sorghe.
v. t.
To form, utter, or modulate by whistling; as, to whistle a tune or an air.
n.
The golden-eye.
n.
The hoary, or northern, marmot (Arctomys pruinosus).
n.
One who, or that which, whistles, or produces or a whistling sound.
v. i.
To sound shrill, or like a pipe; to make a sharp, shrill sound; as, a bullet whistles through the air.
n.
The golden plover and the gray plover.
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