whistle in the wind
English
Verb
- (especially Britain, idiomatic) To attempt something that is futile; to say something that is not heeded.
- 2009 February 22, Simon Caulkin, "However good the pay, it doesn't buy results," Guardian (UK) (retrieved 29 July 2018):
- [T]hey are expending more and more effort on trying to get right something that cannot, and should not, be done in the first place. […] Endless exhortations to "do it better" are, to put it politely, whistling in the wind.
- 2014 January 21, "Don't whistle in the wind?," DLH Marketing (UK) (retrieved 29 July 2018):
- It doesn’t matter how strong your USP is or how powerful your value proposition, if the message isn’t reaching the right people you're whistling in the wind.
- 2018 July 9, Farouk Cassim, "Let’s do much more than whistling in the wind", voices360.com (South Africa) (retrieved 29 July 2018):
- [E]veryone is doing no more than whistling powerlessly in the wind.
- 2009 February 22, Simon Caulkin, "However good the pay, it doesn't buy results," Guardian (UK) (retrieved 29 July 2018):
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