{v. phr.} To survive some disaster. •/When Peter
and Sue started their business they had very little money, but in a year they
weathered the storm./
[wedge]
See: FLYING WEDGE.
[wedlock]
See: BORN OUT OF WEDLOCK.
[wee hours]
The crack of dawn, or just before it, usually between 1 A.M.
and 4 A.M. or 2 A.M. and 5 A.M. •/He stayed up all night when they were
expecting their first child; finally, a boy was born in the wee hours of the
morning./ Compare: SMALL HOURS.
[weeper]
See: FINDERS KEEPERS or FINDERS KEEPERS LOSERS WEEPERS.
[weed out]
{v.} 1. To remove what is unwanted, harmful, or not good
enough from. •/Mother weeded out the library because there were too many
books./ •/Many colleges and universities weed out their freshman classes to
make room for better students./ 2. To take (what is not wanted) from a
collection or group; remove (a part) for the purpose of improving a collection
or group; get rid of. •/The coach is weeding out the weak players this
week./ •/The teacher told Elizabeth to read over her English composition
and weed out every sentence that was not about the subject./
[wee folk]
or [little folk] or [little people]{n. phr.} Fairy
people; brownies; elves; fairies; or goblins. •/Mother read me a story about
the wee folk who lived in the forest and came out at night./ •/There are
many stories about little people dancing in the moonlight./
[week in, week out]
See: DAY IN, AND DAY OUT.
[week of Sundays]
{n. phr.} A long time; seven weeks. •/I haven’t
seen them in a week of Sundays./
[weigh anchor]
{v. phr.} To set sail; get going. •/After a week in
Hawaii, we weighed anchor and sailed south toward Tahiti./
[weigh down]
also [weight down] 1. To make heavy; cause to go down or
bend with weight; overload. •/The evergreens are weighed down by the deep
snow./ — Often used with "with" or "by". •/There are so many children in
the back seat that they are weighing down the back of the car./ 2a. To
overload with care or worry; make sad or low in spirits. — Usually used in the
passive. •/The family is weighed down by sorrow./ •/The company is
weighed down by debt./ 2b. To make heavy, hard, or slow; make dull or
uninteresting. — Often in the passive used with "by" or "with". •/The book
is weighted down with footnotes./ •/The TV program is weighed down by
commercials./
[weigh in]
{v.} 1a. To take the weight of; weigh. •/The man at the
airport counter weighed in our bags and took our plane tickets./ •/A doctor
weighed in the wrestlers./ 1b. To have yourself or something that you own
weighed. — Often used with "at". •/I weighed in at 100 pounds on the scale
today./ •/We took our bags to the airport counter to weigh in./ 1c. To
have yourself weighed as a boxer or wrestler by a doctor before a match. — Often used with "at". •/The champion didn’t want to weigh in at more than 160
pounds./ 2. {slang} To join or interfere in a fight, argument, or
discussion. •/We told Jack that if we wanted him to weigh in with his opinion
we would ask him./ Compare: TAKE PART.