whip hand

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)

Noun[edit]

whip hand (plural whip hands)

  1. The hand in which a horse rider holds the whip.
  2. (idiomatic) An advantage over another; the dominant position.
    • 1876, Anthony Trollope, The Prime Minister[1], page 271:
      Of course I was a fool. My father has the whip hand of me, because he has money and I have none, and it was simply kicking against the pricks to speak as I did.
    • 1895, L. A. Waddell, The Buddhism of Tibet, page 152:
      Even the purest of all the Lamaist sects—the Ge-lug-pa—are thorough-paced devil-worshippers, and value Buddhism chiefly because it gives them the whip-hand over the devils.
    • 2014, Phillip Inman, As UK economy recovers, employers remain reluctant to increase wages, The Guardian:
      Few workers are unionised, and in the UK's increasingly flexible labour market, where it is almost impossible to quit a job and claim unemployment benefits, where zero hour contracts are still a feature and where self-employment is on the rise, employers have the whip hand.