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Returning to the topic of President Donald J. Trump—there was a recent headline in America saying that Trump had ‘whipsawed’ some world leaders.
This is a most unusual verb, that I suspect is almost never used in Australia.
What does it mean to ‘whipsaw’ someone?
Well, the verb starts as a noun.
The Oxford English Dictionary inserts a hyphen into the word and says that a ‘whip-saw’ is ‘a frame-saw with a narrow blade.’
The big American dictionary, the Merriam-Webster, defines a ‘whipsaw’ (no hyphen) is ‘a type of hand-powered saw worked by two people.’
I keep picturing it has a very long-bladed saw made of flexible steel which can be used by two people in two different ways: either (1) one man on each side of a tree being cut down, or (2) one man down in a saw pit and the other above.
As one man pulls, the other pushes, giving the saw a strong, deep cut each way.
This meaning goes back to 1538.
Then there’s the verb ‘to whip-saw’ (either with or without the hyphen!).
This is recorded from 1842.
It began with the meaning of cutting with a whip-saw.
But clearly the headline about Trump was using the word figuratively, metaphorically.
In what way did he ‘whipsaw’ some world leaders?
The Merriam-Webster people say that the saw’s name can be figuratively applied to situations in which someone or something is doubly ‘cut,’ or hurt (‘cut’ as the saw thrusts one way, and again as it saws back).
So, perhaps, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, was hurt when Trump blasted him for failing to provide military support in the Iran War—and blasted him again when Starmer tried to claim that he was partly responsible for the ceasefire.
But, as I say, we would never use the word in this way.
We would never say Albanese had been ‘whipsawed’ when he denied there was any fuel crisis and when he then claimed he was on top of the crisis!
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