whee
English
Interjection
whee
- (childish) An expression of pleasure or enjoyment, mostly from rapid physical motion.
- 2000, Bob Foster, Birdum or Bust!, Henley Beach, SA: Seaview Press, page 175:
- Up came the revs again, slam the door shut, kick the stick off the throttle and up through the gears, down the others side! Whee! Made it again!
- 2001, Ricardo L Garcia, Coal camp days: a boy's remembrance:
- She twisted the rubber band extra tight. Sure enough, the tractor spun off much faster. Whee! She really liked to see it go fast on the living room floor.
- 2009, Phil and Kaja Foglio, Girl Genius, Volume 9, page 81:
- It'll be a secret! Whee!
Translations
Verb
whee (third-person singular simple present whees, present participle wheeing, simple past and past participle wheed)
- (intransitive) To make a high-pitched sound.
- 1970, Philip José Farmer, The Mad Goblin:
- Bullets ricocheted off the walls and the ceiling, wheeing by him, and his face stung from chips of stone.
- (intransitive, informal) To cry whee.
- (transitive, US, colloquial, dated, often with up) To excite, to arouse, to energize.
- 1952, Irving Marsh, Edward Ehre, Best Sports Stories, published 1952, page 146:
- In Princeton marches of eighty-seven, sixty, seventy-six, fifty-two, fifty-eight, thirty-two and sixty-two yards, in which he had the whole-hearted support of a wheed-up Tiger team, Kazmaier passed for three touchdowns, thirty-three and forty-five yards to wingback Dick Pivirotto, four yards to end Len Lyon.
Anagrams
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