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Whipsaw   /wˈɪpsˌɔ/  /hwˈɪpsˌɔ/   Listen
verb
Whipsaw  v. t.  (past whipsawed; past part. whipsawn; pres. part. whipsawing)  
1.
To saw with the whipsaw.
2.
To defeat in, or cause to lose, two different bets at the same turn or in one play, as a player at faro who has made two bets at the same time, one that a card will lose and another that a different card will win; hence, to defeat in spite of every effort.
3.
To cause to suffer a setback or losses by subjecting to two forces at the same time or in rapid succession; as, consumers were whipsawed by both inflation and higher sales taxes.
4.
(Finance) To cause to suffer a series of losses in trading when buying and selling at the wrong times in a rapidly fluctuating market; especially used when an attempt is made, by selling short, to recover losses from a long purchase in a declining market, and the short sale also results in a loss when the market subsequently rises. Used mostly in the passive; as, to be whipsawed by exaggerated responses to a changing outlook.



noun
Whipsaw  n.  
1.
A saw for dividing timber lengthwise, usually set in a frame, and worked by two persons; also, a fret saw.
2.
A kind of narrow ripsaw, tapering from butt to point, with hook teeth and averaging from 5 to 7½ feet in length, used by one or two men.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Whipsaw" Quotes from Famous Books



... so's not to land the outfit in the cellar, the sight of the poor sick man lyin' there—everlastingly lyin'—his helpless hands turned palm up on the covers, why, old Ag's heart was touched. He was that kind of grass-hopper, Ag, to whipsaw you out of a hundred and then lend you five hundred, even if he had to rip the pelt off somebody else to get it. I asked him ...
— Red Saunders' Pets and Other Critters • Henry Wallace Phillips



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