WHITTLE


Meaning of WHITTLE in English

— whittler , n.

/hwit"l, wit"l/ , v. , whittled, whittling , n.

v.t.

1. to cut, trim, or shape (a stick, piece of wood, etc.) by carving off bits with a knife.

2. to form by whittling: to whittle a figure.

3. to cut off (a bit).

4. to reduce the amount of, as if by whittling; pare down; take away by degrees (usually fol. by down, away, etc.): to whittle down the company's overhead; to whittle away one's inheritance.

v.i.

5. to whittle wood or the like with a knife, as in shaping something or as a mere aimless diversion: to spend an afternoon whittling.

6. to tire oneself or another by worrying or fussing.

n.

7. Brit. Dial. a knife, esp. a large one, as a carving knife or a butcher knife.

[ 1375-1425; late ME (n.), dial. var. of thwitel knife, OE thwit ( an ) to cut + -el -LE ]

Random House Webster's Unabridged English dictionary.      Полный английский словарь Вебстер - Random House .