例句 |
whisknoun a quick jerky movement from side to side or up and downwith a whisk of the broom, the dirt was gone swish, switch, wag, waggle oscillation, rock, sway, swing, waverflap, flutter, wave, whipflick, jerk, jolt, snap, twitchjiggle, shake, wigglebob, nod whiskverbto cause to move or proceed fast or fasterthe museum guide kept whisking us along, telling us there was much more we had to see accelerate, bundle, fast-track, hasten, hurry, quicken, rush, speed (up) drive, goad, prod, propel, push, race, spur, stir, urgeaid, dispatch, ease, encourage, expedite, facilitate brake, decelerate, retard, slow (down) delay, encumber, fetter, hamper, hinder, hobble, hold back, hold up, impede, interfere (with), manacle, rein (in), restrain, shackle, tie up, trammelarrest, check, stall, stay, still, stop to move or proceed smoothly and readilynow that the highway has been widened, traffic just whisks along bowl, breeze, brush, coast, cruise, drift, flow, glide, roll, sail, skim, slide, slip, stream, sweep fly, race, rush, speed flounder, struggle limp, lumber, plod, stumble, trudgeshamble, shufflestamp, stomp, stump, tramplabor, toil to proceed or move quicklywhisked through the crowd and delivered the urgent message barrel, belt, blast, blaze, blow, bolt, bomb(slang), bowl, breeze, bundle, bustle, buzz, cannonball, careen, career, chase, course, crack (on), dash, drive, fly, hare, hasten, hie, highball, hotfoot (it), hump, hurl, hurry, hurtle, hustle, jet, jump, motor, nip, pelt, race, ram, rip, rocket, run, rush, rustle, scoot, scurry, scuttle, shoot, speed, step, tear, travel, trot, whirl, zip, zoom beetle, dart, flit, scamper, scud, scufflestampede, streak, whiz(or whizz)gallop, jog, sprintaccelerate, quicken, step outcatch up, fast-forward, outpace, outrun, outstrip, overtakearrow, beeline beat it, get a move on, make tracks, shake a leg, step on it crawl, creep, poke dally, dawdle, dillydally, drag, hang (around or out), lag, linger, loiter, poke, tarryamble, lumber, plod, saunter, shuffle, strolldecelerate, slow (down or up) in the 14th century |