Definition of WHITTLE

whittle

Meanings

Plural: whittles

Noun

  • English aeronautical engineer who invented the jet aircraft engine (1907-1996)
  • A knife; especially, a clasp-knife, pocket knife, or sheath knife.
  • A coarse greyish double blanket worn by countrywomen, in the west of England, over the shoulders, like a cloak or shawl.
  • A whittle shawl; a kind of fine woollen shawl, originally and especially a white one.

Verb

  • cut small bits or pare shavings from
    • "whittle a piece of wood"
  • To cut or shape wood with a knife.
  • To reduce or gradually eliminate something (such as a debt).
  • To make eager or excited; to excite with liquor; to inebriate.

Origin / Etymology

From Middle English whittel (“large knife”), an alteration of thwitel, itself from thwiten (“to whittle”), from Old English þwītan (“to strike down, whittle”), from Proto-Germanic *þwītaną, possibly from Proto-Indo-European *twey- (“to shake, hurl, toss”). Compare Old Norse þveita (“to hurl”), Ancient Greek σείω (seíō, “I shake”). Related to thwite and thwaite.

Synonyms

Frank Whittle, pare, Sir Frank Whittle

Scrabble Score: 13

whittle is a valid Scrabble (US) TWL word
whittle is a valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
whittle is a valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary

Words With Friends Score: 13

whittle is a valid Words With Friends word