Don't eat the beak and you'll escape the napper.
Beak
You whet an appetite by smelling or tasting something that you really like.
Smelling the steaks on the barbecue really whet my appetite!I bought a new stone to whet the blade of my dager.
The song is called "WHET my appetite", sung by Teresa James!
The word whet is a verb that means to make sharp. The wonderful aromas coming from the kitchen served to whet David's appetite.
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Sharpen, as when sharpening a knife with a whetstone, and intensify, like when something 'whets' your appetite.
The correct phrase is "whet your thirst." This means to sharpen or stimulate your desire for something, usually referring to quenching one's thirst for knowledge or excitement. "Wet your thirst" is not a commonly used phrase.
The smell of an apple pie cooking in the oven will never fail to whet my appetite.
Because they are only supposed to whet the appetite and not fill you up, since they come at the start of the meal.
The correct form in "to whet your appetite". "Whet" means to hone or to make more keen or stimulated, whereas "wet" means to cover or soak with water. a whet "wet" rock is used to sharpen knives. the stone or rock is actually wet with water or oil to lubricate & cool the material bing sharpened
In Sea Fever, poet John Masefield wrote "I must down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life, to the gull's way and the whale's way, where the wind's like a whetted knife." Great old poems like that whet everyone's appetite for more