0 past simple and past participle of whisk
1 to take something or someone somewhere else suddenly and quickly:
2 to beat eggs, cream, etc. with a special tool in order to add air and make the food light:
We were told that, when the patient wanted to eat the chocolates, they were whisked away.
Only someone who spends his days being whisked around in a chauffeur-driven limousine could make such an absurd claim.
That will be sufficient for that person to be deprived of his or her liberty and whisked off to a judicial process in a court.
If this huge tidal range whisked everything away, all the theories would be wonderful, but it does not work that way.
The question of exclusion has not just been whisked out of the air, and clause 21 gives us cause for reflection.
This is a first-class piece of successful planning, but it is being whisked away from them, and they are being left with their own operations.
The contract was suddenly whisked away because of the consequences of the redeployment of assets resulting from defence cutbacks.
The general practitioner sees a case whisked out of his hands and transferred to hospital just when his illness becomes professionally interesting.