whittle away

whittle away
phrasal verb [intransitive/transitive]
Word forms "whittle away":
present tense I/you/we/they whittle away he/she/it whittles away present participle whittling away past tense whittled away past participle whittled away
to gradually reduce the amount or importance of something

The team saw their lead whittled away during the second half.

whittle away at:

The government is whittling away at the rights of citizens.


English dictionary. 2014.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • whittle away at — 1. To pare or whittle 2. To reduce, curtail or circumscribe little by little • • • Main Entry: ↑whittle …   Useful english dictionary

  • whittle away — verb cut away in small pieces • Syn: ↑whittle down, ↑wear away • Hypernyms: ↑damage • Verb Frames: Somebody s something Something s something * * * ˌ …   Useful english dictionary

  • whittle away — v. (D; intr.) to whittle away at (to whittle away at smb. s alibi) * * * (D; intr.) to whittle away at (to whittle away at smb. s alibi) …   Combinatory dictionary

  • whittle away — PHRASAL VERB To whittle away something or whittle away at it means to gradually make it smaller, weaker, or less effective. [V P n (not pron)] I believe that the Government s general aim is to whittle away the Welfare State... [V P at n] Their… …   English dictionary

  • whittle away — reduce, cut down …   English contemporary dictionary

  • whittle away (to) —  Slowly reduce/shrink. Like a craftsman carving a piece of wood, managers may choose to slowly rearrange or reduce a department or division …   American business jargon

  • whittle something down — whittle (something) down to gradually reduce or destroy something. By halftime our team s lead had been whittled down to only two points. College is so expensive, after two years, my college fund has been whittled away to almost nothing. Usage… …   New idioms dictionary

  • whittle down — whittle (something) down to gradually reduce or destroy something. By halftime our team s lead had been whittled down to only two points. College is so expensive, after two years, my college fund has been whittled away to almost nothing. Usage… …   New idioms dictionary

  • whittle — ► VERB 1) carve (wood) by repeatedly cutting small slices from it. 2) make by whittling. 3) (whittle away/down) reduce by degrees. ORIGIN from dialect whittle «knife», from an Old English word meaning «cut, cut off» …   English terms dictionary

  • whittle — whit|tle [ˈwıtl] v [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: whittle large knife (15 19 centuries), from thwittle (14 19 centuries), from thwite to whittle (11 19 centuries), from Old English thwitan] 1.) also whittle down [T] to gradually make something smaller …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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