whittle something down

whittle something down
whittle (something) down to gradually reduce or destroy something.

By halftime our team's lead had been whittled down to only two points.

College is so expensive, after two years, my college fund has been whittled away to almost nothing.

Usage notes: also used in the form whittle away at something:

Over the past year, we've whittled away at our debts.

Etymology: based on the literal meaning of whittle (= to shape a piece of wood by cutting strips or small pieces from it with a knife)

New idioms dictionary. 2014.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • whittle something down — ˌwhittle sthˈdown derived to reduce the size or number of sth • I finally managed to whittle down the names on the list to only five. Main entry: ↑whittlederived …   Useful english dictionary

  • ˌwhittle sth ˈdown — phrasal verb to reduce the number of people or things, or the size of something …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • whittle something away/down — reduce something by degrees. → whittle …   English new terms dictionary

  • whittle down — whittle (something) down to gradually reduce or destroy something. By halftime our team s lead had been whittled down to only two points. College is so expensive, after two years, my college fund has been whittled away to almost nothing. Usage… …   New idioms dictionary

  • whittle down — verb cut away in small pieces • Syn: ↑whittle away, ↑wear away • Hypernyms: ↑damage • Verb Frames: Somebody s something Something s something * * * ˌ …   Useful english dictionary

  • whittle away — verb cut away in small pieces • Syn: ↑whittle down, ↑wear away • Hypernyms: ↑damage • Verb Frames: Somebody s something Something s something * * * ˌ …   Useful english dictionary

  • whittle — verb (I, T) to cut a piece of wood into a particular shape by cutting off small pieces with a small knife whittle sth away phrasal verb (T) to gradually reduce the amount or value of something: centralizing measures that had whittled away the… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • whittle — verb 1》 carve (wood) by repeatedly cutting small slices from it.     ↘make by whittling. 2》 (whittle something away/down) reduce something by degrees. Origin C16: from dialect whittle knife …   English new terms dictionary

  • whittle — [[t](h)wɪ̱t(ə)l[/t]] whittles, whittling, whittled VERB If you whittle something from a piece of wood, you carve it by cutting pieces off the wood with a knife. [V n] He whittled a new handle for his ax... [V n] Chitty sat in his rocking chair… …   English dictionary

  • whittle — whit|tle [ˈwıtl] v [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: whittle large knife (15 19 centuries), from thwittle (14 19 centuries), from thwite to whittle (11 19 centuries), from Old English thwitan] 1.) also whittle down [T] to gradually make something smaller …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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