whale on
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]See whale (“to beat vigorously or soundly”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]whale on (third-person singular simple present whales on, present participle whaling on, simple past and past participle whaled on)
- (slang) To strike an opponent heavily and repeatedly in a fight.
- 1962, Norman Mailer, The Death of Benny Paret:
- If he had been able to break loose from his handlers and the referee, he would have jumped Paret to the floor and whaled on him there.
- 2000, Joseph Di Prisco, Confessions of Brother Eli[1], page 320:
- Philip was whaling on O, who was whaling on Slater, who was whaling on Genesius, who was whaling on Philip. Blood, spittle, and curses were flying.
- 2014, Jack Hart, Skookum Summer: A Novel of the Pacific Northwest[2], page 278:
- “Big sumbitch,” Don Dykes said. “Took a fuckin' ax handle to me. Just whaled on my fuckin' ass.”
- (slang) To beat heavily on anything.
- The wrench wouldn’t budge, even though Tony was just whaling on it with a big old sledge hammer.
- 1999, Stephen King, Bag of Bones[3]:
- Standing at the front, wearing a guitar and whaling on it as she sang, was Sara Tidwell.
- 2012, Nora Roberts, The Last Boyfriend[4], page 71:
- Jaw tight, Ryder picked up his hammer, set a framing nail, and whaled on it.
- 2014, Chris Fabry, The Song[5]:
- Now he couldn't get enough of playing his father's music on a CD and whaling on the drum set Jed had bought him at one of those warehouse club stores
Alternative forms
[edit]Translations
[edit]to strike heavily in a fight
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to beat heavily on anything
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References
[edit]- “whale on”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.