white-knuckle
Appearance
See also: white knuckle
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Adjective
[edit]white-knuckle (not comparable)
- (idiomatic) Causing fear, excitement, apprehension, suspense, or nervousness.
- 2010 July 16, Colleen Long and Harry R. Weber, "BP capped well holding nearly a day into new fix", Associated Press wire:
- BP said its capped-off well appeared to be holding steady Friday morning, almost midway into a white-knuckle waiting period in which engineers watched the pressure gauges for signs of a leak.
- 2009 November 27, “Jimi Hendrix's Voodoo Child has 'best guitar riff'”, in BBC[1]:
- "No surprise given both Bellamy and White share - or have inherited - Hendrix's unique blend of experimental instincts and white-knuckle showmanship," said Mr Goldsmith.
- 2010 July 16, Colleen Long and Harry R. Weber, "BP capped well holding nearly a day into new fix", Associated Press wire:
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]causing fear, excitement, apprehension, suspense or nervousness
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Verb
[edit]white-knuckle (third-person singular simple present white-knuckles, present participle white-knuckling, simple past and past participle white-knuckled)
- (transitive) To endure despite feeling terror, fear, apprehension, anxiety, discomfort, or torment.
- 2010, Tanya Ebert, Mystical Puzzle, page 24:
- The rest of the drive home I white knuckled it.
- 2017, Susan Mallery, Maisey Yates, Baby, It's Christmas & Hold Me, Cowboy:
- “I white-knuckled it down there. Went as fast as I could. I didn't tell anyone I was going. When I got there, they wouldn't let me in. Because I wasn't family.”
- 2023, Justin Cook, Infectious Injustice:
- Some J-CATs didn't even take medication, meaning they white-knuckle this lifestyle, possibly unaware of their deviation from reality and normality.
- (transitive) To grip tightly in fear, apprehension, suspense, or nervousness.
Translations
[edit]to endure
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