| 单词 | whit | 
| 释义 | whitn.1 Now somewhat archaic or literary.  1.  A very small, or the least, part or amount; an iota, a jot, a bit.  a.  Without negative, esp. in  every whit: every last thing, every little bit; the whole. ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > wholeness > the whole or all > 			[noun]		 > the whole quantity, number, or amount > the whole lot every whita1450 every stitch?a1500 the devil and all1543 prow and poop1561 Christ-cross-row1579 every snip1598 thread and thrum1600 boodle1625 hair and hoof1705 rag-tag (also rag, tag) and bob-tail1725 tutti quanti1772 lot1791 lock, stock, and barrel1824 stock and fluke1825 the whole boiling1837 box and dice1839 the whole caboodlea1848 sub-cheese1859 the whole kit and boiling (boodle, caboodle, cargo)1859 the whole jingbang1866 the whole hypothec1871 the whole ball of wax1882 the whole (entire) shoot1884 (at) every whip-stitch1888 work1899 issue1919 guntz1958 full monty1979 the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > 			[noun]		 > a small quantity or amount > the smallest amount > a jot cornc888 grotc888 prickleOE prickOE pointc1300 grain1377 hair1377 motec1390 twynt1399 mitec1400 tarec1405 drop1413 ace?1440 tittlea1450 whita1450 jot1526 Jack1530 plack1530 farthingc1540 minima1585 scintil1599 atom1626 scintillation1650 punct1653 doit1660 scintilla1674 rap1792 haet1802 dottle1808 smiggot1823 hooter1839 heartbeat1855 pick1866 filament1868 hoot1878 a1450    Castle Perseverance 		(1969)	 l. 359 (MED)  				To þe World wolde he not flyt But forsok it euery whytt. a1529    J. Skelton Magnyfycence 		(?1530)	 sig. Diii  				What he sayth and she sayth to lay good ere And tell to his sufferayne euery whyt. 1539    Bible 		(Great)	 1 Sam. iii. 18  				Samuel tolde him euery whitt, & hidd nothing from him. c1590    J. Stewart Poems 		(1913)	 198  				His maist prencelie Spreit,..vill appaise thy hoip in euerie quheit. 1665    J. Bunyan Holy Citie 		(1669)	 182  				Thou must enter in by every whit of Christ, or thou shalt enter in by never a whit of him. 1792    A. Geddes tr.  Bible I. Deut. xiv. 16  				All its spoil ye shall collect into the midst of its street, and shall burn with fire both the city and every whit of its spoil, in honour of the Lord. 1828    F. Corbyn Biogr., Sacred & Interesting 158  				But one was to come into the world, who should fulfil every whit of the law. 1921    A. M. Royden Sex & Common-sense iv. 84  				Is there one whit of difference, morally, between the prostitution that has no legal recognition and the prostitution that has? 1978    I. Doig This House of Sky 		(1992)	 249  				Latham House, if any single sum can be put to it, was a scuffed, restive, Aleutian-atoll of a place to spend one's college years—and every whit of it suited me. 2012    Columbian 		(Vancouver)	 		(Nexis)	 6 Aug.  a6  				We can't even find two candidates for the presidency who have a whit of difference between them beyond the timing of hardly dissimilar proposals.  b.  With negative expressed or implied, esp. in  never a whit,  not a whit: not at all, not in the least.Recorded earliest in no whit adv.For the negation expressed by devil, e.g. in quots. c1500, 1528, 1533, see devil n. Phrases 1e(b). ΚΠ c1450						 (c1350)						    Alexander & Dindimus 		(Bodl.)	 		(1929)	 l. 354 (MED)  				We no wante no wite of worldliche fode. c1500    Lyfe Roberte Deuyll 212 in  W. C. Hazlitt Remains Early Pop. Poetry Eng. 		(1864)	 I. 227  				The deuyll have the whyt that he was forye [1798 sorye] therfore. 1528    Rede me & be nott Wrothe sig. d viiv  				I trowe thou arte a syngynge man?.. The devil of the whit that I can. 1533    J. Heywood Mery Play Iohan Iohan sig. A.i  				Thynke ye that she wyll amende yet. Nay by our lady the deuyll spede whyt. a1538    T. Starkey Dial. Pole & Lupset 		(1989)	 62  				Some have to much some to lytyl & some never a wyt. 1610    P. Holland tr.  W. Camden Brit.  i. 713  				It can shew scarce any whit of the ancient state it had. 1630    R. Norton tr.  W. Camden Hist. Princesse Elizabeth  iii. 60  				Hauing sacked the Towne, they found not a whit of gold. 1631    J. Mabbe tr.  F. de Rojas Spanish Bawd xviii. 183  				The divell awhit shall I be able to tell them. 1678    R. Barclay Apol. True Christian Divinity iv. §2. 97  				We do not ascribe any whit of Adam's Guilt to Men. 1710    B. Hoadly Ans. Dr. Atterbury 23 in  Orig. & Inst. Civil Govt.  				It is not one whit of more importance than to say that [etc.]. 1830    Ld. Tennyson Owl  ii. ii  				Not a whit of thy tuwhoo, Thee to woo to thy tuwhit. 1867    E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest I. iii. 152  				It was not their policy to destroy or to change one whit more than was absolutely necessary. 1874    C. E. Norton Let. 10 Jan. 		(1913)	 II. 29  				No whit of faith in the good as good..has vanished from my soul. 1902    Monthly Rev. Sept. 163  				Nor with waxing years had he abated of his duties a whit. 1924    B. S. Aldrich Mother Mason 		(1987)	 viii. 190  				Hang onto your faith that these minor ups and downs make not a whit of difference with the great love you bear each other. 2012    Washington Times 		(Nexis)	 3 Dec.  b4  				Well over the hill, he finds himself a bit creakier, perhaps a step slower, but not a whit less sharp.  2.  In phrases used adverbially, with connotation of extent or degree.  a.  With negative expressed or implied.  never, not (etc.) a whit (†awhit, a-whit),  any whit,  one whit: not in the least, not at all. See also no whit adv. ΘΚΠ the world > existence and causation > existence > non-existence > 			[noun]		 > none or not any one of noneeOE never, not (etc.) a whit (awhit, a-whit)1523 the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > small of quantity, amount, or degree			[phrase]		 > not at all never-a-dealc1250 no dealc1250 not a dealc1250 no grue13.. not a (one) grue13.. for no (kin) meedc1330 in (also by and without preposition) no mannerc1330 nothing like?a1425 by no (manner of) means (also mean)c1440 at no handa1500 never, not (etc.) a whit (awhit, a-whit)1523 not a quincha1566 by leisure1590 1523    Ld. Berners tr.  J. Froissart Cronycles I. cccxliv. f. ccixv/2  				He loued hym nat one whyt the better [Fr. ne len ayma pas mieulx]. 1558    W. Ward tr.  G. Ruscelli Secretes Alexis of Piemount 		(1568)	 7  				Leaue the water vpon the fournesse, without mouing it any whit. 1564    Briefe Exam. ****iij  				You helpe your selues neuer awhyt. 1593    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  i. ii. 51  				Nor is the freedom of the wil of God any whit abated..by meanes of this. 1598    W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1  ii. v. 374  				Falst. Art thou not horribly afraid?..Prin. Not a whit. 1607    ‘W. S.’ Puritaine  i. 1  				Shee cryed nere a whitte at all. 1642    D. Rogers Naaman 871  				It never troubles you awhit! 1727    T. Fuller Introductio ad Prudentiam II. 234  				Their own Heart will tell them they have been not a Whit better than highway Rogues. 1773    J. Hawkesworth Acct. Voy. Southern Hemisphere III.  ii. ix  				Not a whit behind them in cheerfulness and vivacity. 1775    R. B. Sheridan Rivals  iv. iii  				You don't seem one whit the happier at this. 1809–10    S. T. Coleridge Friend 		(1865)	 175  				He..is not a whit the better Christian for being a bad patriot. 1873    J. A. Symonds Stud. Greek Poets v. 135  				Grief will profit us no whit. 1893    M. Pemberton Iron Pirate ii  				The novelty..did not surprise me one whit. 1909    H. James Golden Bowl 		(1985)	 Pref. 20  				He..makes us see the things that may most interest us..and yet after all never a whit to the prejudice of his being just as consistently a foredoomed, entangled, embarrassed agent. 1947    Post-Standard 		(Syracuse, N.Y.)	 1 June 28/2  				The Monster, not a whit discouraged by being referred to as..‘Frankenstein,’..was set to mow down a Puritanian populace. 2012    Wall St. Jrnl. 24 July  a15/5  				I don't care a whit whether the Aurora killer was a loner.  b.  Without negative.  a whit: to a very small extent, a very little.  any whit,  one whit: to the least amount, in the least degree, at all.  every (†each) whit: completely, altogether, thoroughly, quite (in later use almost always with as in comparisons of equality). ΘΚΠ the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > small of quantity, amount, or degree			[phrase]		 > to a small extent or a little littlec1175 a litec1290 a little quantityc1330 little whata1387 wee1513 a whit1526 thought1581 a wee bita1661 a small (also little) matter1690 a trifle1859 a wheen1869 a taste1894 smitch1895 a lick1902 mite1939 a skosh1959 a tidge1959 a tad1969 the world > relative properties > quantity > smallness of quantity, amount, or degree > small of quantity, amount, or degree			[phrase]		 > in the least or the slightest degree the leastc1400 any whit1526 one whit1526 (not) a wink1596 in the least1608 in the smallesta1616 in the leastwise1676 tint1886 the world > relative properties > wholeness > completeness > completely			[phrase]		 > in full or to fullest extent to the full1340 at the fulla1375 at one's righta1425 in (the) wholea1475 every (each) whit1526 full due1574 in gross1606 in full habitudea1661 to capacity1958 1526    Bible 		(Tyndale)	 John vii. f. cxxxv  				Disdayne ye at me, be cause I made a man every whit whoale on the saboth daye? a1529    J. Skelton Tunnyng of Elynour Rummyng in  Certayne Bks. 		(?1545)	 411  				Elynour made the pryce For good ale eche whyt. 1555    in  J. Strype Eccl. Memorials 		(1721)	 III. App. l. 161  				Every Child..that can any whit speak. 1568    Newe Comedie Iacob & Esau  ii. iv. sig. D.ijv  				He eaten vp euery whit. 1574    J. Whitgift Def. Aunswere to Admon. ii. 104  				Master Zuinglius (who woulde haue beene lothe one whit to strengthen the Papistes). 1618    in  W. Foster Eng. Factories India 1618–21 		(1906)	 49  				Yf they be suffred but a whit longer, they will make claime to the whole Indies. 1672    Duke of Buckingham Rehearsal  ii. 15  				I have written..a whole cart-load of things, every whit as good as this. 1700    S. Parker 6 Philos. Ess. 12  				The Primæval Earth will be e'ery whit as ill shaped as that we poor Mortals inhabit. a1715    Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time 		(1724)	 I. 274  				Every whit as wild and extravagant. 1823    W. Scott Quentin Durward II. xiii. 309  				Were my situation one whit less perilous. 1868    W. Morris Earthly Paradise  i. 342  				At the King's command A clerk that day did note it every whit. 1869    E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest III. xii. 231  				The narrative of this campaign..is every whit as puzzling. 1903    I. Zangwill Grey Wig vi. 110  				Mrs. Drabdump felt a whit uneasy. 1966    B. Brophy Don't never Forget 223  				And really a talking animal is only a whit more startling than a talking star. 1992    B. Unsworth Sacred Hunger xxiv. 214  				Thurso and Yellow Henry were using the argument from quantity too, and every whit as rigorously. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > inferior person > 			[noun]		 > as abused warlockOE swinec1175 beastc1225 wolf's-fista1300 avetrolc1300 congeonc1300 dirtc1300 slimec1315 snipec1325 lurdanc1330 misbegetc1330 sorrowa1350 shrew1362 jordan1377 wirlingc1390 frog?a1400 warianglea1400 wretcha1400 horcop14.. turdc1400 callet1415 lotterela1450 paddock?a1475 souter1478 chuff?a1500 langbain?c1500 cockatrice1508 sow1508 spink1508 wilrone1508 rook?a1513 streaker?a1513 dirt-dauber?1518 marmoset1523 babiona1529 poll-hatcheta1529 bear-wolf1542 misbegotten1546 pig1546 excrement1561 mamzer1562 chuff-cat1563 varlet1566 toada1568 mandrake1568 spider1568 rat1571 bull-beef1573 mole-catcher1573 suppository1573 curtal1578 spider-catcher1579 mongrela1585 roita1585 stickdirta1585 dogfish1589 Poor John1589 dog's facec1590 tar-boxa1592 baboon1592 pot-hunter1592 venom1592 porcupine1594 lick-fingers1595 mouldychaps1595 tripe1595 conundrum1596 fat-guts1598 thornback1599 land-rat1600 midriff1600 stinkardc1600 Tartar1600 tumbril1601 lobster1602 pilcher1602 windfucker?1602 stinker1607 hog rubber1611 shad1612 splay-foot1612 tim1612 whit1612 verdugo1616 renegado1622 fish-facea1625 flea-trapa1625 hound's head1633 mulligrub1633 nightmare1633 toad's-guts1634 bitch-baby1638 shagamuffin1642 shit-breech1648 shitabed1653 snite1653 pissabed1672 bastard1675 swab1687 tar-barrel1695 runt1699 fat-face1740 shit-sack1769 vagabond1842 shick-shack1847 soor1848 b1851 stink-pot1854 molie1871 pig-dog1871 schweinhund1871 wind-sucker1880 fucker1893 cocksucker1894 wart1896 so-and-so1897 swine-hound1899 motherfucker1918 S.O.B.1918 twat1922 mong1926 mucker1929 basket1936 cowson1936 zombie1936 meatball1937 shower1943 chickenshit1945 mugger1945 motherferyer1946 hooer1952 morpion1954 mother1955 mother-raper1959 louser1960 effer1961 salaud1962 gunk1964 scunge1967 1612    B. Jonson Alchemist  iv. vii. sig. K4v  				Then you are an Otter, and a Shad, a Whit, A very  Tim.       View more context for this quotation This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2015; most recently modified version published online December 2021). Whitn.2 I.  Compounds.  1.  Designating the days of Whitsun week (Whitsun week n. at Whitsun n. Compounds 3), as  Whit Monday,  Whit Tuesday,  Whit Wednesday, etc. Cf. Whitsunday n.Whit Saturday is used to denote the Saturday before Whitsunday (cf. Whitsun eve n. at Whitsun n. Compounds 3). ΘΚΠ society > faith > worship > liturgical year > feast, festival > specific Christian festivals > Pentecost > 			[noun]		 > Tuesday following Whit Tuesdaya1697 society > faith > worship > liturgical year > feast, festival > specific Christian festivals > Pentecost > 			[noun]		 > Wednesday following Whit Wednesday1778 society > faith > worship > liturgical year > feast, festival > specific Christian festivals > Pentecost > 			[noun]		 > Thursday following Whit1839 1557    Queen Mary I Let. 2 June in  Hist. MSS Comm.: 15th Rep., App. Pt. II 		(1897)	 31 in  Parl. Papers (C. 8327) XLVIII. 423  				Untill the viiith daye of this present moneth whiche shall be Whitmondaye. 1665    Wonders if not Miracles V. Gertrux 5  				I went up thither..on White-munday. a1697    J. Aubrey Nat. Hist. Surrey 		(1718)	 III. 227  				Here are two Fairs, viz. on September 12th, and Whit-Tuesday. 1774    J. Woodeforde Diary 24 May 		(1924)	 I. 132  				Cary Fair to-day being White Tuesday. 1778    S. Whatley England's Gazetteer 		(ed. 2)	  				Llanbeder, Cardiganshire..has..fairs on Whit-Wednesday, July 10 [etc.]. 1839    Penny Cycl. XIII. 403/1  				Whit-Thursday. 1867    E. F. Bowden tr.  Countess Hahn-Hahn Lives Fathers of Desert 365  				In the night between Whitsunday and Whitmonday. 1869    R. D. Blackmore Lorna Doone III. xxii. 320  				It was now Whit-Tuesday, and the lilacs all in blossom. 1960    Billboard 23 May 43/4  				The telerecording Harry Belafonte made for BBC-TV last fall..gets a re-run Whit Saturday. 2013    Leicester Mercury 		(Nexis)	 1 June (Features section) 12  				Every Whit Monday my grandmother would take me to see the Bristol Morris Men.  2.   Whit week  n. the week beginning with Whitsunday; Whitsun week. ΘΚΠ society > faith > worship > liturgical year > feast, festival > specific Christian festivals > Pentecost > 			[noun]		 PentecosteOE WhitsundayOE Whitsundaya1250 Whitsuntidec1275 Lok-Soundayc1315 Lokes1340 Whitsun Sunday1532 White Sunday1546 W.c1565 Whit week1728 society > faith > worship > liturgical year > feast, festival > specific Christian festivals > Pentecost > 			[noun]		 > week beginning with Whit Sunday Whitsun weekc1325 Whit week1728 1728    P. W. Descr. Counties Eng. & Wales 21  				Sandbach, Wednesday in Whit-Week. 1899    Daily News 18 May 7/1  				Whit-week would be a very good time to close the schools. 1912    E. A. Parry What Judge Saw v. 66  				When you become a citizen of Manchester you recognise the sanity of the Whit-week festival. 2010    Worcester News 		(Nexis)	 22 June  				Although the meeting was in Whit Week we still had a good attendance.  3.  Relating to or occurring at Whitsun, or on Whitsunday. ΚΠ 1816    Morning Post 1 June 2/4  				Some routine business was then disposed of, and the House adjourned (for the Whit-Holidays) until Thursday next. 1893    S. C. Lowry Wks. Holy Spirit 		(ed. 3)	 xii. 102  				My friends, it is well that we have our annual Whit-day to remind us of the presence and work of the blessed Comforter. 1963    Times 5 June 7/1 		(heading)	  				Whit road toll down by 19. 1976    T. Nichols  & P. Armstrong Workers Divided 108  				This morning our foreman told us that we've got to work Whit Bank Holiday. 2009    D. O'Briain Tickling Eng. xiv. 214  				In Brighton that Whit weekend, about a thousand youths fought each other on the prom and beach.  4.   Whit walk  n. an event at Whitsun in which church congregations walk in procession through the streets.Whit walks have a particular association with the north of England, esp. Lancashire. ΘΚΠ society > faith > worship > liturgical year > feast, festival > specific Christian festivals > Pentecost > 			[noun]		 > procession during Whit walk1931 1931    Guardian 22 May 11/4 		(advt.)	  				All about the Whit Walks. 1949    Times 7 June 4/6  				At Manchester..the weather brightened up for the 143rd Whit-walk. 1999    D. Haslam Manchester, Eng. iii. 58  				Church processions, especially the Whit walks, were a favourite subject for the camera crews.  II.  Simple uses.  5.  Whitsun. ΚΠ 1921    G. V. Owen Life beyond Veil II. vi. 160  				All those ideas which with you do cluster about such as Christmas and Epiphany and Easter and Whit and the like are reinforced from such colonies as these. 1965    E. Malpass Morning's at Seven 		(2001)	 v. 46  				It was typical Christmas weather, warmer than Easter, drier than Whit. 1990    R. Hamilton With Love from Ma Maguire 		(1992)	 iii. 92  				When they walked at Whit, all the brewery horses done up, banners flying in the breeze. 2014    R. Brooks Knight who saved Eng. ii. 82  				Respites were shorter than in real wars: Advent to Epiphany, Easter, Whit, and All Saints. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2015; most recently modified version published online December 2021). † Whitn.3 cant. Obsolete.   Chiefly with the. (A nickname for) Newgate prison; also used more generally with reference to other prisons. Cf. rub v.3 ΘΚΠ society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > 			[noun]		 > specific prisons King's Bench1427 marshalsea1436 tunc1503 chateleta1513 clinkc1530 the Fleet1530 Bocardo1535 bastille1561 Poultry Compter1644 Whit1673 the Moor1869 the Ville1903 the Scrubs1923 H-block1976 Mandela University1986 1673    R. Head Canting Acad. 11  				And when that we come to the Whit, Our Darbyes to behold, And for to do our pennance there We booz the Water cold. 1676    Warn. Housekeepers 5  				They rub us to the whitt. 1699    B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew at Bone  				The Cove is Bon'd and gon to the Whit, c. the Rogue is taken up and carried to Newgate, or any other Goal. 1708    J. Hall Mem. Right Villainous John Hall Gloss. 23  				Wit, Newgate. 1811    Lexicon Balatronicum at Rub  				Don't rub us to the whit; don't send us to Newgate. 1859    G. W. Matsell Vocabulum 99  				I may bid as high as your pintle, and make you squint like a bag of nails..though you rub us to whit for it. This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2015; most recently modified version published online March 2022). whitv. Now somewhat rare.   intransitive. To make a shrill abrupt sound, as a bird's chirp, the whistle of a flying bullet, etc. Cf. whit int. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > unpleasant quality > shrill quality > sound shrill			[verb (intransitive)]		 > make shrill sound yellOE pipec1275 treblec1425 shrillc1440 squail1526 squeal1600 skirl1827 blat1846 whine1874 whit1899 zing1899 whee1960 1899    ‘A. Raine’ By Berwen Banks ii. 22  				He seated himself yesterday on a tombstone when we were in church, and whit, whit, whitted ‘Men of Harlech’ on his flute! 1902    Illustr. London News 8 Mar. 358/3  				The nuthatch is whit-whitting in the elms. 1910    ‘R. Dehan’ One Braver Thing xxx. 247  				The singing bullets went by or whit-whitted about them in the dust. 1973    R. D. Symons Where Wagon Led v. 65  				We saw mallards and pintails in their nuptial flights, their wings whit-whitting as they cut the air. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2015; most recently modified version published online December 2021). whitint.n.4 A. int.   Expressing a shrill abrupt sound, as a bird's chirp, the whistling of a flying bullet, etc. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > unpleasant quality > shrill quality > 			[adverb]		 shilla1250 keenlyc1275 shirla1300 bremelya1375 sharp1377 shillya1400 shirlly1470 shrilly1582 whit1833 squeal1849 reedily1910 bleatingly1934 the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > unpleasant quality > shrill quality > shrill sound			[interjection]		 whit1833 1833    M. Scott Tom Cringle's Log I. viii. 232  				The musket-balls were..plumping into the timber, whit whit! 1840    Peter Parley's Ann. 11/2  				The same old owl, o'er the murder foul, Cry, whit, to whit, to woo. 1843    R. S. Surtees Handley Cross I. v. 86  				‘Whit’, cries the coachman to his horses, off they go. 1864    Ld. Tennyson Grandmother x, in  Enoch Arden, etc. 119  				And whit, whit, whit, in the bush beside me chirrupt the nightingale. 1997    State Jrnl.-Reg. 		(Springfield, Il.)	 		(Nexis)	 18 Jan. (Outdoors section) 13  				I described to her the call of the Cardinal, our state bird: ‘What cheer! What cheer!’ or ‘Whit-whit-whit-whit’ or ‘Purity, purity, purity, purity’ and ‘Cue, cue, cue.’  B. n.4   An instance of this; a shrill abrupt sound. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > unpleasant quality > shrill quality > 			[noun]		 > sound shrill1591 shrilling1639 scriding?1690 skirling1820 whit1853 squeal1867 blat1904 whee1920 whine1928 blatting1935 1853    Home Friend 2 57  				Then it [sc. a sedge warbler] gives the whit, whit, whit, of the swallow, or the twink, twink, of the chaffinch, to perfection. 1867    J. W. De Forest Miss Ravenel's Conversion xxxii. 455  				The leisurely hum of long-range bullets had changed into the sharp, multitudinous whit-whit of close firing. 1888    R. Kipling Ballad Boh Da Thone 134  				Where the whit of the bullet, the wounded man's scream Are mixed. 1900    Longman's Mag. Jan. 230  				The whit-whit of the scraping knives. 1974    Audubon May 7/1  				We hear the spring-song of the white-breasted nuthatch—a short whit-whit-whit like calling up a dog. 2006    K. Elliott Spirit Gate xv. 132  				The whit whit of the knife strokes sounded like a bird's cry, heard from a distance. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2015; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < | 
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