See: AFTER A WHILE or IN A WHILE, ALL THE TIME(1), EVERY NOW AND
THEN or EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE, ONCE IN A WHILE.
[while ago]
{adv.} At a time several minutes in the past; a few minutes
ago; a short time ago. — Used with "a". •/I laid mv glasses on this table a
while ago; and now they’re gone./ •/A while ago, Mary was tired and wanted
to go home; now she’s dancing with Bob as if she could dance all night./
Compare: JUST NOW(2).
[while away]
{v.} To make time go by pleasantly or without being bored;
pass or spend. •/We whiled away the time that we were waiting by talking and
playing cards./ •/We whiled away the summer swimming and fishing./
[while back]
{adv.} At a time several weeks or months in the past. — Used with "a". •/We had a good rain a while back, but we need more now./
•/Grandfather is well now, but a while back he was in the hospital for three
weeks./ See: CRACK THE WHIP.
[whip hand]
See: UPPER HAND.
[whipping boy]
{n. phr.} The person who gets punished for someone
else’s mistake. •/"I used to be the whipping boy during my early days at the
company," he musingly remembered./
[whip up]
{v.}, {informal} 1. To make or do quickly or easily.
•/Mary whipped up a lunch for the picnic./ •/The reporter whipped up a
story about the fire for his paper./ 2. To make active; stir to action;
excite. •/The girls are trying to whip up interest for a dance Saturday
night./ Compare: STIR UP, WHOOP IT UP(2).
[whispering campaign]
{n.} The spreading of false rumors, or saying bad
things, about a person or group, especially in politics or public life. •/A
bad man has started a whispering campaign against the mayor, saying that he
isn’t honest./
[whistle]
See: BLOW THE WHISTLE ON, WET ONE’S WHISTLE.
[whistle a different tune]
See: SING A DIFFERENT TUNE.
[whistle for]
{v.}, {informal} To try to get (something) but fail;
look for (something) that will not come. •/Mary didn’t even thank us for
helping her, so the next time she needs help she can whistle for it./
[whistle in the dark]
{v. phr.}, {informal} To try to stay brave
and forget your fear. •/Tom said he could fight the bully with one hand, but
we knew that he was just whistling in the dark./ (From the fact that people
sometimes whistle when walking in a dark, scary place to keep up their
courage.)
[whistle-stop]
{n.} A small town where the trains only stop on a
special signal. •/President Truman made excellent use of the whistle-stop
during his 1948 campaign for the presidency./
[white]
See: BLACK AND WHITE, IN BLACK AND WHITE.
[white around the gills]
See: GREEN AROUND THE GILLS.
[white-collar workers]
{n. phr.} Workers employed in offices and at
desks as opposed to those who work as manual workers; the middle class. •/It
is a well-known fact that white-collar workers are less well organized than
unionized manual workers./ Contrast BLUE-COLLAR WORKERS.
[white elephant]
{n. phr.} Unwanted property, such as real estate, that
is hard to sell. •/That big house of theirs on the corner sure is a white
elephant./
[white lie]
{n. phr.} An innocent social excuse. •/I am too busy to
go to their house for dinner tonight. I will call them and tell a little white
lie about having the flu./