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  1. used to say that a football player should continue playing until the referee blows the whistle, rather than stop playing because he or she thinks the referee will award a foul, throw-in, etc.: You always have to play to the whistle. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Competing in sport.

    • English (US)

      play to the whistle. idiom. used to say that a soccer player...

    • Polski

      play to the whistle definicja: 1. used to say that a...

  2. play to the whistle. sports To keep playing the game until the referee blows the whistle and officially stops play. Come on, you guys have got to play to the whistle! I don't care if someone fell on top of the puck—the play is still going on until the ref blows the whistle!

  3. play to the whistle. idiom. used to say that a soccer player should continue playing until the referee blows the whistle, rather than stop playing because he or she thinks the referee will call a foul, throw-in, etc.: You always have to play to the whistle. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  4. Apr 15, 2015 · Share. AN injury break in a rugby match is the unlikely subject for this poem from an engagingly disparate collection of poems and translations (of the Greek poet Cavafy) by Alasdair Gordon. The...

  5. play to the whistle. sports To keep playing the game until the referee blows the whistle and officially stops play. Come on, you guys have got to play to the whistle! I don't care if someone fell on top of the puck—the play is still going on until the ref blows the whistle!

  6. Included below is a list of literary terms that can help you interpret, critique, and respond to a variety of different written works. This list is by no means comprehensive, but instead offers a primer to the language frequently used by scholars and students researching literary works.

  7. Play to the Whistle is a British sports comedy panel game show that aired on ITV from 11 April 2015 to 4 April 2017.

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