whisperer
English
Etymology
From whisper + -er. The extended senses were popularized by the film The Horse Whisperer (1998).
Noun
whisperer (plural whisperers)
- Someone who whispers.
- Someone who tells secrets; a gossip.
- Someone who is skilled in taming or training a certain kind of animal, using gentle vocal commands and body language as opposed to physical contact. See horse whisperer.
- (figurative, by extension) Someone who has an uncanny ability to control or manipulate a certain thing or person; an expert or guru in a particular field or subject
- dog whisperer
- hormone whisperer
- 2015, Aaron Sorkin, Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs, spoken by John Sculley (Jeff Daniels):
- 'Cause I hear you've been worse than usual this morning and I didn't think that was possible. So I've been dispatched to be the Steve whisperer.
- 2020, Emily Segal, Mercury Retrograde, New York: Deluge Books, →ISBN:
- Among my coworkers, I'd been developing a reputation as a boss-whisperer, in part due to the success of my unusual negotiation strategy, and as of that week, the unexpected success of the billboard.
- 2023 September 30, Hannah Murphy, “The wildest job in Silicon Valley”, in FT Weekend, Life & Arts, page 18:
- These include Steve Davies, The Boring Company CEO, and Omead Afshar, who once led Tesla's Gigafactory in Austin and is nicknamed “the Elon whisperer”.
Derived terms
Translations
someone who whispers
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Further reading
- Jonathon Green (2024) “whisperer n.”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang
Anagrams
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