FORCE vs WHIP: NOUN
- A waterfall.
- A force play.
- A vector quantity that tends to produce an acceleration of a body in the direction of its application. Newton's second law of motion states that a free body accelerates in the direction of the applied force and that its acceleration is directly proportional to the force and inversely proportional to its mass.
- A unit of a nation's military personnel, especially one deployed into combat.
- Military strength.
- A person or group capable of influential action.
- A body of persons or other resources organized or available for a certain purpose.
- One that possesses such capacity.
- A capacity for affecting the mind or behavior; efficacy.
- Moral strength.
- Intellectual power or vigor, especially as conveyed in writing or speech.
- The use of physical power or violence to compel or restrain.
- Power made operative against resistance; exertion.
- The capacity to do work or cause physical change; energy, strength, or active power.
- A unit that is part of some military service
- One possessing or exercising power or influence or authority
- (of a law) having legal validity
- An act of aggression (as one against a person who resists)
- (physics) the influence that produces a change in a physical quantity
- Group of people willing to obey orders
- A group of people having the power of effective action
- A powerful effect or influence
- Physical energy or intensity
- One who operates a whip-hoisting or whip-conveying line.
- A light line used in marine life-saving apparatus, run as an endless circuit from the shore around a sheave on the vessel and back to the shore. The breeches-buoy is operated by such a whip.
- In pianoforte-making, the crosspiece at the top of an action-extension which bears and operates both the hammer-and the damper-action. Also called jack-whip. See the cut under pianoforte.
- See the extract.
- A ride in an amusement park, consisting of small cars that move in a rapid, whipping motion along an oval track.
- An arm on a windmill.
- A call issued to party members in a lawmaking body to ensure attendance at a particular time.
- A member of a legislative body, such as the US Congress or the British Parliament, charged by his or her party with enforcing party discipline and ensuring attendance.
- A whipper-in.
- Flexibility, as in the shaft of a golf club.
- Something, such as a long radio antenna on a motor vehicle, that is similar to a whip in form or flexibility.
- A blow, wound, or cut made by whipping.
- A whipping or lashing motion or stroke; a whiplash.
- An instrument, either a flexible rod or a flexible thong or lash attached to a handle, used for driving animals or administering corporal punishment.
- A legislator appointed by the party to enforce discipline
- A dessert made of sugar and stiffly beaten egg whites or cream and usually flavored with fruit
- (golf) the flexibility of the shaft of a golf club
- An instrument with a handle and a flexible lash that is used for whipping
- A quick blow with a whip
FORCE vs WHIP: VERB
- To cause to do through pressure or necessity, by physical, moral or intellectual means :She forced him to take a job in the city tocausetodothroughpressureorne
- Squeeze like a wedge into a tight space
- Cause to move along the ground by pulling
- Move with force, He pushed the table into a corner movewithforcehepushedthetablei
- Urge or force (a person) to an action; constrain or motivate
- Take by force
- Force into or from an action or state, either physically or metaphorically
- Do forcibly; exert force
- Impose or thrust urgently, importunately, or inexorably
- Defeat thoroughly
- Beat severely with a whip or rod
- Subject to harsh criticism
- Whip with or as if with a wire whisk
- Thrash about flexibly in the manner of a whiplash
- Strike as if by whipping
FORCE vs WHIP: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To move in a manner similar to a whip; thrash or snap about.
- To move in a sudden, quick manner; dart.
- To defeat soundly.
- To hoist by means of a rope passing through an overhead pulley.
- To wrap or bind (a rope, for example) with twine to prevent unraveling or fraying.
- To sew with a loose overcast or overhand stitch.
- To snatch, pull, or remove in a sudden manner.
- To beat (cream or eggs, for example) into a froth or foam.
- To arouse or excite, especially with words.
- To strike or affect in a manner similar to whipping or lashing.
- To afflict, castigate, or reprove severely.
- To strike with a strap or rod; lash.
FORCE vs WHIP: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To cause an opponent to play (a particular card).
- To allow (a run) to be scored by walking a batter when the bases are loaded.
- To put (a runner) out on a force play.
- To cause to grow or mature by artificially accelerating normal processes.
- To induce change in (a complex system) by changing one of its parameters.
- To rape.
- To break down or open by force.
- To move, open, or clear by force.
- To use (language) with obvious lack of ease and naturalness.
- To produce with effort and against one's will.
- To increase or accelerate (a pace, for example) to the maximum.
- To put undue strain on.
- To inflict or impose relentlessly.
- To move or effect against resistance or inertia.
- To gain by the use of force or coercion.
- To compel through pressure or necessity.
- N/A
FORCE vs WHIP: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Exert force
- Do forcibly
- Cause to move by pulling
- Move with force, "He pushed the table into a corner"
- Constrain or motivate
- Urge or force (a person) to an action
- A putout of a base runner who is required to run; the putout is accomplished by holding the ball while touching the base to which the runner must advance before the runner reaches that base
- Move with force
- To cause to do through pressure or necessity, by physical, moral or intellectual means
- To overcome or overthrow by force; accomplish one's purpose upon or in regard to by force or compulsion; compel to succumb, give way, or yield.
- To act effectively upon by force, physical, mental, or moral, in any manner; impel by force; compel; constrain.
- To stuff; farce.
- To clip off the upper and more hairy part of (wool), for export: a practice forbidden by stat.
- To clip or shear, as the beard or wool. In particular
- (idiom) (in force) In effect; operative.
- (idiom) (in force) In full strength; in large numbers.
- (idiom) (force (someone's) hand) To force to act or speak prematurely or unwillingly.
- (idiom) (force (oneself) on/upon) To rape.
- A quick blow delivered with a whip or whiplike object
- To fish upon with a fly or other bait; draw a fly or other bait along the surface of: as, to whip a stream.
- To beat into a froth, as eggs, cream, etc., with a whisk, fork, spoon, or other implement.
- To thrash; beat out, as grain by striking: as, to whip wheat.
- To cause to spin or rotate by lashing with a whip or scourge-stick: said of a top.
- To lash, in a figurative sense; treat with cutting severity, as with sarcasm or abuse.
- To drive with lashes.
- To outdo; overcome; beat: as, to whip creation.
- To punish with a whip, scourge, birch, or the like; flog: as, to whip a vagrant; to whip a perverse boy.
- To strike with a whip or lash, or with anything tough and flexible; lash; use a whip upon: as, to whip a horse.
- Nautical, to hoist or purchase by means of a rope passed through a single pulley.
- To gather by a kind of combination running and overhand stitch: as, to whip a ruffle.
- To sew with an over and over stitch, as two pieces of cloth whose edges are laid or stitched together; overcast: as, to whip a seam.
- To lay regularly on; serve in regular circles round and round.
- To overlay, as a cord, rope, etc., with a cord, twine, or thread going round and round it; inwrap; seize; serve with twine, thread, or the like wound closely and tightly round and round: generally with about, around, over, etc.
- To move, throw, put, pull, carry, or the like, with a sudden, quick motion; snatch: usually followed by some preposition or adverb, as away, from, in, into, off, on, out, up, etc.: as, to whip out a sword or a revolver.
- In angling, to cast the line or the fly by means of the rod with a motion like that of using a whip; make a cast.
- To move suddenly and nimbly; start (in, out, away, etc.) with sudden quickness: as, to whip round the corner and disappear.
- (idiom) (whip into shape) To bring to a specified state or condition, vigorously and often forcefully.
FORCE vs WHIP: RELATED WORDS
- Drive, Wedge, Forcefulness, Ram, Pull, Pull, Pressure, Thrust, Effect, Strength, Power, Push, Push, Personnel, Coerce
- Party whip, Worst, Mop up, Rack up, Blister, Whiplash, Welt, Slash, Pip, Whisk, Flog, Lather, Trounce, Strap, Lash
FORCE vs WHIP: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Squeeze, Violence, Drive, Wedge, Forcefulness, Ram, Pull, Pull, Pressure, Thrust, Effect, Strength, Push, Push, Personnel
- Beat, Thonged, Stick, Party whip, Worst, Mop up, Blister, Whiplash, Welt, Slash, Whisk, Flog, Lather, Trounce, Strap
FORCE vs WHIP: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The official podcast of Air Force Space Command heads West to Vandenberg Air Force Base, California!
- Space Force or an officer who has been appointed and scrolled into the Space Force.
- Defence Force magistrates in respect of service offences by Australian Defence Force personnel.
- Upon graduation, you will be commissioned as a second lieutenant on active duty Air Force or Space Force.
- Violent crimes are defined in the UCR Program as those offenses that involve force or threat of force.
- Summation of force can involve either sequential summation of force or simultaneous summation of force.
- Let us turn now to consider what force it was that conquered physical force.
- Entry into force Publication of treaty, once Treaties and Unbound pamphlet; in force.
- Roy was assigned to an Air Force Special Operations Force Helicopter Gunship.
- During our review of force incidents, we saw many examples of force, including deadly force, being used against individuals in crisis.
- To whip up a delicious dinner its advertisement portrayed two black women three line whip in a sentence naked, in chains, executions.
- He is also weak against the Abyss Whip in boss rush mode, but the Thunder Whip is still his major weakness.
- First he feels my whip and the whip to warm up on the back and tail.
- This whip effect is mainly large for upstream process such as suppliers or sub processes, at the end of the whip.
- For stimuli: It was not that a punished animal came to fear the whip; the whip itself became aversive.
- Gephardt, the Minority Whip, Trent Lott, the Majority Whip, Tony Coelhoto say we have this problem.
- NERVE WHIP ATTACK: the nerve whip is a small technical device sacrifices for Azathoth.
- All it needs to work with a whip is an adapter and a whip.
- Inescapable Lash whip and I will try to whip it from the, whip it good!
- When attached to an abyssal whip, a whip vine, or an Abyssal vine whip, it creates the lava whip.
FORCE vs WHIP: QUESTIONS
- Are the Swap Force abilities exclusive to Swap Force characters?
- What is the force that can counteract the inertial force?
- How do you find restoring force from displacement and restoring force?
- Why is the support force on an object called the normal force?
- What is the force of force between Proton and electron?
- What are the benefits of Infinity force over Trinity force?
- Is the Japan Self Defense Force a real military force?
- Why is centripetal force called a fictitious force?
- Can Action Force and reaction force cancel each other?
- Is friction a balanced force or an unbalanced force?
- What are the advantages and disadvantages of whip stitch?
- Can I substitute stabilized whipped cream for Cool Whip?
- Which KitchenAid mixers are compatible with Univen wire whip?
- Is +2 weapon specialization worth it for whip builds?
- What are the ingredients in Miracle Whip made from?
- What makes pistol whip different from other VR games?
- How many Weight Watchers points are Cool Whip cookies?
- What causes whip tail disease in cauliflower plants?
- How is a braided whip different from a traditional whip?
- Should I use the ISI gourmet whip or the thermo whip?