different between whistle vs heckling
whistle
English
Etymology
From Middle English whistlen, from Old English hwistlan, hwistlian (“to whistle”), from Proto-Germanic *hwistl?n? (“to make a hissing sound”). Cognate with Icelandic hvísla (“to whisper”), Russian ???????? (svistet?, “to whistle”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /w?sl?/, /??sl?/
- Rhymes: -?s?l
Noun
whistle (countable and uncountable, plural whistles)
- A device designed to be placed in the mouth and blown, or driven by steam or some other mechanism, to make a whistling sound.
- An act of whistling.
- A shrill, high-pitched sound made by whistling.
- Any high-pitched sound similar to the sound made by whistling.
- the whistle of the wind in the trees
- (Cockney rhyming slang) A suit (from whistle and flute).
- (colloquial) The mouth and throat; so called as being the organs of whistling.
- Let's […] drink the other cup to wet our whistles.
Derived terms
Translations
Verb
whistle (third-person singular simple present whistles, present participle whistling, simple past and past participle whistled)
- (transitive, intransitive) To make a shrill, high-pitched sound by forcing air through the mouth. To produce a whistling sound, restrictions to the flow of air are created using the teeth, tongue and lips.
- Never whistle at a funeral.
- She was whistling a happy tune.
- (transitive, intransitive) To make a similar sound by forcing air through a musical instrument or a pipe etc.
- The stream train whistled as it passed by.
- (intransitive) To move in such a way as to create a whistling sound.
- A bullet whistled past.
- (transitive) To send, signal, or call by a whistle.
Derived terms
Translations
See also
- whistle on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Whistle in the Encyclopædia Britannica (11th edition, 1911)
Anagrams
- whilest
whistle From the web:
- what whistles
- what whistles at night
- what whistles at night in the woods
- what whistleblower means
- what whistleblowing protections exist in nj
- what whistle means
- what whistle hurts dogs ears
- what whistles do referees use
heckling
English
Verb
heckling
- present participle of heckle
Noun
heckling (plural hecklings)
- The act of one who heckles.
- 2008, Ruth Wodak, Veronika Koller, Handbook of Communication in the Public Sphere (page 256)
- Speeches during parliamentary debates, however, belong to linguistic action patterns in which interruptions and hecklings (Burkhardt 2004) are generally conventionalised and accepted as facultative reactions […]
- 2008, Ruth Wodak, Veronika Koller, Handbook of Communication in the Public Sphere (page 256)
- The preparation of flax for spinning using special combs called hackles.
heckling From the web:
- what's heckling mean
- what does heckling mean
- what is heckling in comedy
- what is heckling in hindi
- what does heckling mean antonyms
- what does heckling someone mean
- what does heckling
- what is heckling in tagalog
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- whistle vs heckling
- substance vs cause
- knot vs fraternity
- unclear vs dim
- smash vs jolt
- presupposition vs postulate
- revivified vs reopened
- hidebound vs reactionary
- feast vs practice
- indefinite vs circumspect
- set vs secure
- elating vs cheerful
- bulletin vs hearsay
- cap vs jacket
- parting vs demarcation
- incomprehensible vs arcane
- fixed vs even
- accommodation vs use
- scrape vs strip
- stupor vs shock