whistle stop
Noun: 1. A small, often minor, railway station located between larger, principal stations on a line. It is a place where trains do not regularly stop unless signaled to do so. 2. A brief, quick stop made during a tour or campaign, especially a political campaign, often in a small town. This meaning derives from the practice of political candidates making short speeches from the back of a train at such small stations.
The term is used to describe both the physical location (the station) and the type of brief, informal visit associated with such locations. * As a physical location: "The train only slows down for the whistle stop; you have to signal the conductor if you want to get off." * Describing a type of visit/tour: "The senator began her whistle-stop tour across the rural counties."
- "The old whistle stop hadn't seen a passenger in decades, but the building was still standing."
- "The candidate's whistle-stop campaign involved giving short speeches from the caboose in a dozen towns in two days."
- "Before the interstate was built, the town was just a whistle stop on the railway line."
- "Whistle-stop tour": This is a common compound noun describing a series of very brief visits, especially for political campaigning or promotional purposes. The visits are characterized by their short duration and informal nature.
- Example: "The author went on a whistle-stop tour to promote her new book, visiting five cities in three days."
- Whistle-stop (adjective): Used to describe something related to or characteristic of such brief visits or small stations.
- Example: "They conducted a whistle-stop campaign strategy."
- Flag stop: A synonym, primarily in North American English, for a railway station where trains stop only on signal.
- Way station: A small station on a railway or other route.
- (For the station): Flag stop, way station, halt.
- (For the type of visit): Brief stop, quick visit, flying visit.
The two primary meanings are closely linked. The first meaning is the original, literal one referring to the railway infrastructure. The second meaning is a figurative extension that became popular in the context of political campaigning by train, where candidates would make impromptu stops and speeches at these small stations. In modern usage, the figurative sense (a brief stop on a tour) is very common, even when the mode of transport is not a train.
- a small railway station between the principal stations or a station where the train stops only on a signal