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whales "

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    • \ ˈ(h)wāl \

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    [Noun]  | "whale" | \ ˈ(h)wāl \


    1: any of various very large, aquatic, marine mammals (order Cetacea) that have a torpedo-shaped body with a thick layer of blubber, paddle-shaped forelimbs but no hind limbs, a horizontally flattened tail, and nostrils that open externally at the top of the head; also : cetacean

    2: one that is impressive especially in size


    Origin: before 12th century ;

     Middle English, from Old English hwæl; akin to Old High German hwal whale and perhaps to Latin squalus sea fish;

    [Noun]  | "Antarctic minke whale" 


    1: minke whale


    Origin: 1970 ;

    [Noun]  | "baleen whale" 


    1: any of a suborder (Mysticeti) of usually large whales typically of colder waters that lack teeth but have baleen plates in the upper jaw which are used to filter chiefly small crustaceans (such as krill) out of large quantities of seawater


    Origin: 1874 ;

    [Noun]  | "beaked whale" 


    1: any of a family (Ziphiidae) of toothed whales that have a relatively long, narrow snout suggestive of a beak, that in the males often have a large bulging forehead, and that unlike other whales lack a notch on the fluke


    Origin: 1755 ;

    [Noun]  | "blue whale" 


    1: a very large baleen whale (Balaenoptera musculus synonym Sibbaldus musculus) that may reach a weight of 150 tons (136 metric tons) and a length of 100 feet (30 meters) and is generally considered the largest living animal


    Origin: 1851 ;

    [Noun]  | "common minke whale" 


    1: minke whale


    Origin: 2002 ;

    [Noun]  | "fin whale" 


    1: a baleen whale (Balaenoptera physalus) that may attain a length of over 70 feet (21 meters) and is found chiefly in subtropical to arctic and antarctic waters worldwide —called also finback


    Origin: 1885 ;

    [Verb]  | "whale" 


    1: to engage in whale fishing


    Origin: 1700 ;

    [Verb]  | "whale" 


    1: lash, thrash

    2: to strike or hit vigorously

    3: to defeat soundly


    Origin: circa 1790 ;

     Origin unknown;

    [Geographical name]  | "Whales, Bay of" 


    1: inlet of the Ross Sea, Antarctica, in the Ross Ice Shelf

    [Noun]  | "whales" 


    1: something that is unusually large and powerful;


      * e.g., " ... a whale of a pickup truck "





    [Noun]  | "whale" 


    1: something that is unusually large and powerful;


      * e.g., " ... a whale of a pickup truck "





    [Verb]  | "whales" 


    1: to deliver a blow to (someone or something) usually in a strong vigorous manner;


      * e.g., " ... whaled the ball so hard that it sailed over the fence and into the neighbor's yard "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    2: to strike repeatedly with something long and thin or flexible;


      * e.g., " ... whaled the rug with a broom to knock the dirt out of it "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    3: to strike repeatedly;


      * e.g., " ... mercilessly whaled the pickpocket for stealing from her purse "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    [Verb]  | "whale" 


    1: to deliver a blow to (someone or something) usually in a strong vigorous manner;


      * e.g., " ... whaled the ball so hard that it sailed over the fence and into the neighbor's yard "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    2: to strike repeatedly with something long and thin or flexible;


      * e.g., " ... whaled the rug with a broom to knock the dirt out of it "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





    3: to strike repeatedly;


      * e.g., " ... mercilessly whaled the pickpocket for stealing from her purse "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "whales" ]

    1: fat

      * e.g.,  ... Whales suck they eat all our sailors drink all out water. and shed on out beaches. We should either kill them or so shaved them ore both 


     [ "whales" ]

    2: hairy


     [ "whales" ]

    3: Useless


     [ "whales" ]

    4: mammals


     [ "whales" ]

    5: actually I would doubt that whales were anything other than malevolent giant fish if they weren't shedding their gross body hair onto my beaches

     [ "Whale" ]

    1: A person who spend incredible amount of money in gacha type games which makes him/her ultra powerful and godlike.

      * e.g.,  ... "HOLY SHIT, I just got recked by that event boss, how can I pull out this?" 


     [ "Whale" ]

    2: Commonly used in many reddit mobile game /r.

      * e.g.,  ... "I see, try to add this whale to your buddy, his UR unit with god tier gear can one shot anything in the game!" "Did you see the new announcement? We have a nice offer coming next week and the girls are so cute! I'm gonna whale like a boss!" 

     [ "Whale" ]

    1: In sales terms, a whale is a prospect that is significantly larger than an organization’s average customer. Whales are large and extremely difficult to close. Due to their immense size, they are highly sought-after. A whale is typically identified at first by a whale hunter on the sales team, but often requires cross-discipline participation in order to close; this includes assistance from operations, engineering, creative, client success, and business development teams.

      * e.g.,  ... "Shit...the sales director chewed me out on the sales call this morning. He's totally pissed that I have nothing in my pipeline. I've been focused on this one whale for so long that I haven't had time to prospect for normal-sized deals." 

     [ "whale" ]

    1: noun; a wealthy patron to a casino, gets paid special attention by a casino host so the patron will feel comfortable to gamble more money.

      * e.g.,  ... My whale just walked in. He is hosting the Ferrari convention downstairs. 

     [ "Whale" ]

    1: A gambler who has the capacity to win and lose large sums of money in a casino.

      * e.g.,  ... Knowing their potential windfall, the casino caters to their whales. 

     [ "Whaling" ]

    1: To 'whale' in a game or 'whaling' is a term for gamers or gambling addicts who spend a good huge amount of money on video games or casinos. Since a whale is huge and they pay hugely for gambling or gaming, you can see why this is a thing. With gamers, microtransactions existed for them within free-to play games (e.g. loot boxes, in-game currency, booster packs, cosmetics, etc.), gacha-like games, mobile games, battle-royale games or anything along those lines. Gamblers are people who whale tons of cash on slot machines, poker and other natures of casino games and gambling. "Whales" was a phrase first used by video game publishers to describe their main customers who insufferably liked to gamble their money for in-game items.

      * e.g.,  ... Bob: "Hey, Dylan. Guess what happened: I convinced my mum to buy me V-bucks and I spent a heck load on Fartnite last night. So cool, dude." Dylan: "That game is for toddlers. I see why you needed her to buy it for you. Because toddlers rely on their mummies, and you like to whale money within a crappy game, to buy things you don't need. Player Ultimate Battlegrounds is way better than your game." Sarah: "Guys, guys, guys... come on. It's not that bad. I spend my free time whaling my student funds on Weeb/Grand Order to get the best units with Gacha hatchers and to be a better player, haha... I think I'm the worst than both of you combined." 

     [ "Whale" ]

    1: Slang for a fat person. Primarily used to describe an obese person.

      * e.g.,  ... I'm not playing seven minutes if a whale is playing. 

     [ "whale on" ]

    1: to assault, maul, or generally pummel another with great vigour and enthusiasm. To deliver a beating.

      * e.g.,  ... Huckleberry Finn says of his Pap (father) that “He used to always whale on me when he was sober.” (Mark Twain) 

     [ "The Whale" ]

    1: When a person is submerged in water and they slightly emerge their anus out of the water and lets loose a high velocity fart spraying water and/or fecal matter resembling a Whale surfacing for air.

      * e.g.,  ... Position 31 in the "fartmasutra" is called "The whale". 

     [ "Whale" ]

    1: A big fucking thing in the water. Not to be confused with oil tanker.

      * e.g.,  ... The whale ate him with horrible teeth of pain. 

     No results from Words API...

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