0 one of the long hairs between the nose and the mouth of a cat etc. -- vous
1 in plural a man’s moustache, beard and/or sideburns. -- knír, vous, kotlety
In my opinion, that particular argument that soldiers should keep out of the political arena has whiskers on it.
Having sought to burn up time in a way that has had a predictable result, they are now complaining because their whiskers are being singed.
Our grandfathers, at whose top hats and whiskers we now laugh, were able to make roads in every direction where traffic called for them.
He finished his meal, wiped his whiskers and dived again for another one.
The entry tiger, for example, is accompanied by a small picture on which you can move about for further detail of the body parts of the animal (like whiskers).
Insects and crustaceans employ whiskers and antennae as a place to position their exteroceptors outside their tough exoskeletons so that they can sense the surrounding environment.
Electrical signals were sent to parts of the brain and provided a virtual contact to the animal's whiskers, showing them which way the operator wished them to go.
Boxplots without whiskers indicate small variance.