whip
verb /wɪp/
  /wɪp/
Verb Forms
 Phrasal Verbs| present simple I / you / we / they whip |  /wɪp/  /wɪp/ | 
| he / she / it whips |  /wɪps/  /wɪps/ | 
| past simple whipped |  /wɪpt/  /wɪpt/ | 
| past participle whipped |  /wɪpt/  /wɪpt/ | 
| -ing form whipping |  /ˈwɪpɪŋ/  /ˈwɪpɪŋ/ | 
- [transitive] whip somebody/something to hit a person or an animal hard with a whip, as a punishment or to make them go faster or work harder- He was taken back to the jail and soundly whipped.
 Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- soundly
 
- [intransitive, transitive] to move, or make something move, quickly and suddenly or violently in a particular direction- + adv./prep. A branch whipped across the car window.
- Her hair whipped around her face in the wind.
- whip something The waves were being whipped by 50 mile an hour winds.
 Extra Examples- At the sound of his name, he whipped round and glared at us.
- The wind whipped across the moors.
- The wind whipped her hair around her face.
 
- [transitive] whip something + adv./prep. to remove or pull something quickly and suddenly- She whipped the mask off her face.
- The man whipped out a knife.
 Extra Examples- She whipped the letter away from him.
- A gust of wind whipped off her hat.
- He whipped out a notebook and began scribbling furiously.
 
 enlarge image[transitive] to mix cream, etc. very quickly until it becomes stiff enlarge image[transitive] to mix cream, etc. very quickly until it becomes stiff- whip something Serve the pie with whipped cream.
- Lightly whip the egg whites and add them to the mixture.
- whip something up Whip the egg whites up into stiff peaks.
 Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- lightly
- up
 
- [transitive] whip somebody/something (North American English, informal) to defeat somebody very easily in a game- The team whipped its opponents by 35 points.
- They whipped Australia 18–3 in the final game.
 
- [transitive] whip something (British English, informal) to steal something
