To hit with a whip.
The rider whipped the horse.
(by extension) To hit with any flexible object.
I whipped her with a newspaper.
To defeat, as in a contest or game.
To mix in a rapid aerating fashion, especially food.
to whip eggs or cream
To urge into action or obedience.
He whipped the department into shape.
To enforce a member voting in accordance with party policy.
To bind the end of a rope with twine or other small stuff to prevent its unlaying: fraying or unravelling.
To hoist or purchase by means of a whip.
To sew lightly; specifically, to form (a fabric) into gathers by loosely overcasting the rolled edge and drawing up the thread.
to whip a ruffle
To throw or kick an object at a high velocity.
He whipped the ball at me.
To fish a body of water especially by making repeated casts.
To snap back and forth like a whip.
The pennants whipped in the wind.
To move very fast.
The wind whipped through the valley.
To move (something) very fast; often with up, out, etc.
To transfer momentum from one skater to another.
To lash with sarcasm, abuse, etc.
To thrash; to beat out, as grain, by striking.
to whip wheat
The punishment of being whipped.
A heavy defeat; a thrashing.
A cooking technique in which air is incorporated into cream etc.
A cord or thread used to lash or bind something.
(whipping) The lashing of the end of a rope. (FM 55-501).
The sewing of the edges of single leaves in sections by overcasting the thread.