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    Whis·tle
    /ˈ(h)wis(ə)l/

    noun

    • 1. a clear, high-pitched sound made by forcing breath through a small hole between partly closed lips, or between one's teeth.
    • 2. a suit. informal British

    verb

    • 1. emit a clear, high-pitched sound by forcing breath through a small hole between one's lips or teeth: "the audience cheered and whistled"
  2. The meaning of WHISTLE is a small wind instrument in which sound is produced by the forcible passage of breath through a slit in a short tube. How to use whistle in a sentence.

  3. to move quickly through or past something, especially in a way that makes a long, high sound: whistle through She heard the wind whistling through the trees and the howl of a distant wolf. whistle past I stepped out of the building and immediately a bullet whistled past my head.

  4. Whistle definition: to make a clear musical sound, a series of such sounds, or a high-pitched, warbling sound by the forcible expulsion of the breath through a small opening formed by contracting the lips, or through the teeth, with the aid of the tongue.. See examples of WHISTLE used in a sentence.

  5. WHISTLE meaning: 1. to make a high sound by forcing air through a small hole or passage, especially through the…. Learn more.

  6. A whistle is a small wind instrument, and you probably know people who are good at whistling without an instrument. Trains have whistles, and the wind whistles too. The world is full of whistles.

  7. Used in various forms and sizes for many different purposes: esp. (blown by the mouth) by boatswains, by the police, etc., for calling dogs or horses, or the like, or (blown by steam) on railway engines, steam-ships, etc., for giving a signal or alarm; also as a musical toy, usually of tin and pierced with six holes (commonly called penny ...

  8. 1. (Phonetics & Phonology) to produce (shrill or flutelike musical sounds), as by passing breath through a narrow constriction most easily formed by the pursed lips: he whistled a melody. 2. ( tr) to signal, summon, or command by whistling or blowing a whistle: the referee whistled the end of the game. 3.

  9. Definition of whistle verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. to tell someone in authority about something wrong or illegal that someone is doing. See whistle in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Check pronunciation: whistle. Definition of whistle noun in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary.

  11. the loud, high sound produced by air or steam being forced through a small opening, or by something moving quickly through the air. the whistle of a boiling kettle. the whistle of a bullet. The train entered the tunnel with a shrill whistle. Oxford Collocations Dictionary.

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