| 1. | a handful or small bundle of straw, hay, or the like. |
| 2. | any thin tuft, lock, mass, etc.: wisps of hair. |
| 3. | a thin puff or streak, as of smoke; slender trace. |
| 4. | a person or thing that is small, delicate, or barely discernible: a mere wisp of a lad; a wisp of a frown. |
| 5. | a whisk broom. |
| 6. | Chiefly British Dialect.
|
| 7. | a will-o'-the-wisp or ignis fatuus. |
| 8. | to twist into a wisp. |
wisp (wĭsp) n.
v. tr. To twist into wisps or a wisp. v. intr. To drift in wisps: smoke wisping from chimneys. [Middle English.] wisp'i·ly adv., wisp'i·ness (wĭs'pē-nĭs) n., wisp'y adj. |
Wisp
["An Experiment with a Self-Compiling Compiler for a Simple List-Processing Language", M.V. Wilkes, Ann Rev Automatic Programming 4:1-48. (1964)].