whipstock
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]whipstock (plural whipstocks)
- The stock, or rigid handle, of a whip.
- Synonym: whipstick
- c. 1607–1608 (date written), William Shakespeare, [George Wilkins?], The Late, and Much Admired Play, Called Pericles, Prince of Tyre. […], London: […] [William White and Thomas Creede] for Henry Gosson, […], published 1609, →OCLC, [Act II, scene ii]:
- He had need mean better than his outward show
Can any way speak in his just commend;
For by his rusty outside he appears
To have practised more the whipstock than the lance.
- 1895, Kate Douglas Wiggin, “The Eventful Trip of the Midnight Cry”, in The Village Watch-Tower[1], Boston: Houghton Mifflin, page 216:
- Jerry gave one terror-stricken look, wound his reins round the whipstock, and, leaping from his seat, disappeared behind a convenient tree.
- 1913, Elizabeth Mary Wright, chapter 14, in Rustic Speech and Folk-Lore[2], Oxford University Press, page 234:
- 1917 September, Robert Frost, “The Axe-Helve”, in The Atlantic Monthly, page 339:
- He liked to have [the axe-helve] slender as a whipstock,
Free from the least knot, equal to the strain
Of bending like a sword across the knee.
- (by extension) The driver of a carriage.
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