whittle

/ˈʍɪtəl/

whittle

English Noun Top 36,440
Ad

Definition

A knife; especially, a clasp-knife, pocket knife, or sheath knife.

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.

Example Sentences

  • "Novv if any man can be ſo unkind to his ovvn Body, for I meddle not vvith your Souls, as to ſtand ſtill like a good Chriſtian, and offer his VVeeſon to a Butcher's VVhittle, I ſay no more but that he may be ſav'd, and that's the beſt can come on him."
  • "Rude whittles."
  • "The Sheffield whittle was the common knife of the country, which every one carried for general purposes, who was not entitled by rank to wear a sword."
Ad