whip
How to Use Whip
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishA tool for striking or a quick, sudden motion — and, separately, a party official who enforces voting discipline.
Word Forms
whipped past tense, whips plural, whips singular
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
The rider gave the horse a light touch with the _____ to speed it up.
Etymology
From Middle English whippen, "to move suddenly", related to Dutch wippen ("to swing or bounce") — the political sense comes from "whipper-in", the huntsman who kept hounds from straying, borrowed into parliamentary slang in the 1700s.