whittle

/'witl/
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whittle

A child uses a pocketknife to whittle a small wooden figure.

Definition
  1. Verb:
    • To cut small bits or pare shavings from a piece of wood or other material: The core meaning involves shaping or reducing something by repeatedly cutting small pieces from it with a knife.
    • To reduce or diminish something gradually: This figurative meaning describes the process of making something smaller or weaker bit by bit over time.
Usage and Examples
  • Verb (Literal - shaping with a knife):

    • He sat on the porch to whittle a stick into a toy.
    • She carefully whittled the piece of cedar to create a smooth shape.
  • Verb (Figurative - gradually reducing):

    • The new regulations will whittle away the company's profits.
    • We need to whittle down the list of candidates to just three.
Advanced Usage and Figurative Meanings
  • "to whittle away at something": To gradually reduce the strength, size, or value of something.
    • Inflation has been whittling away at our savings for years.
  • "to whittle something down (to something)": To reduce the number or amount of something until a smaller, desired number or amount is reached.
    • After several interviews, we whittled the applicants down to a shortlist of five.
Variants and Related Words
  • Whittler (noun): A person who whittles wood as a hobby or craft.
    • My grandfather was an expert whittler who could make beautiful birds from blocks of pine.
Synonyms
  • Carve: To cut wood or stone to make an object or pattern. (More artistic/defined than whittle).
  • Pare: To trim or cut away the outer edges or surface of something.
  • Trim: To make something neater or smaller by cutting away irregular or unwanted parts.
  • Reduce: To make something smaller or less in amount, degree, or size. (General synonym for the figurative sense).
Phrasal Verbs
  • Whittle away: To gradually use up or reduce something.
    • Poor management whittled away the organization's resources.
  • Whittle down: To reduce the size or number of something systematically.
    • The coach whittled down the team from 40 players to 25.
Notes on Usage
  • The literal use of whittle almost always implies the use of a small knife and a casual or repetitive cutting action, often associated with woodcraft or idle activity.
  • The figurative uses (whittle away, whittle down) are very common in modern English, especially in business, planning, and descriptive contexts.
whittle

A child uses a pocketknife to whittle a small wooden figure.

Noun
  1. English aeronautical engineer who invented the jet aircraft engine (1907-1996)
Verb
  1. cut small bits or pare shavings from
    • whittle a piece of wood