whisked in English

verb
1
take or move (someone or something) in a particular direction suddenly and quickly.
his jacket was whisked away for dry cleaning
2
beat or stir (a substance, especially cream or eggs) with a light, rapid movement.
In another bowl whisk the cream until light peaks form.
synonyms:whipbeatmix
3
brush with a whisk broom.
A motorized snow broom whisks away snow following a December dusting at Grand Forks.

Use "whisked" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "whisked" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "whisked", or refer to the context using the word "whisked" in the English Dictionary.

1. The horse whisked its tail angrily.

2. I was whisked away in a police car.

3. As Meg appeared, Scrabble whisked into his hole.

4. He was whisked away as his audience bolted for the exits.

5. Her husband whisked her off to Egypt for her birthday.

6. The waiter whisked away the plates before we had finished.

7. Our coffees were whisked away before we'd even finished them.

8. The waiter whisked away the food before we had finished.

9. He chose the lead dancer-then whisked her off for a romp.

10. Feathered wisps of tell-tale vapor whisked through it at Blurring speed

11. Letters and packages are whisked from country to country by means of airmail.

12. Bulkier things like sofas can be delivered or whisked away on a rented roof-rack.

13. She's dreaming she'll be whisked off her feet by a tall,[sentencedict .com] dark handsome stranger.

14. Stirred, mixed, whipped, blended, whisked, frothy, foamy Cool a little and slowly add the Beaten eggs

15. Odd words and phrases came to him but, like sticks dropped into rapids, they were quickly whisked away.

16. An 80-strong crowd gathered in the street outside, some jeering as the convoy whisked away.

17. After lunch, AEs are given a sales motivational talk, then are whisked on to the dealing floor.

18. Tiller writing the storyline still whisked his audience round the world but the comedy element was more dominant.

19. He whisked the butter and eggs together, wondering if this was the right way to make an omelette.

20. Yes, we are the same Bundys that filed a claim that our mansion had been whisked away in Hurricane Andrew.

21. John Gittings investigates Lost and found A small bundle in a blanket is whisked through the orphanage gates.

22. One day, many of the newer dogs at the Yard are whisked off to a building (a veterinarian office).

23. They appeared in court, pled guilty, and were whisked off to Vienna for their swap and a trip home.

24. Back on the ship afterwards, she flashed the smile one more time - and then whisked away to her own cabin.

25. He whisked the paper out from under my pen and sped to the back room, where I presume the credit bureau was being contacted.

26. The villagers expected the Witnesses to drop dead, but it was the spiritist who fainted and had to be whisked away by his embarrassed supporters.

27. Upon disembarking the plane, The Beatles were whisked to a press conference hosted by Capitol Records in which they playfully answered questions from the media.

28. She was resuscitated, stabilized, whisked over to a CAT scan suite right next to the emergency room, because they were concerned about blood clots in the lung.

29. Though some might accuse Abraham of political correctness (Spencer-Davis, incidentally, is a deaf actor), his production is infused with such infectious high spirits that any whiff of polemical Attitudinizing is quickly whisked away. Beyond Shakespeare's wildest 'Dreams'

30. Just before she was whisked away to the aisle of all things cultivated and appropriate, I invited the woman to my house, only half-jokingly, to dig up some of the many volunteer Bonesets that had spread throughout the property.

31. ‘a Congratulatory handshake to mark four years of community success’ ‘He was among the first to send a Congratulatory e-mail to the new CEO.’ ‘Secret Service agents whisked her away to take a Congratulatory phone call from the president.’ ‘She wrote him a Congratulatory note the following day.’