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"whipping up" is a perfectly valid phrase in written English.
It is usually used to mean to create or make something quickly or enthusiastically. For example, "I was whipping up a batch of cookies for the bake sale."
Exact(60)
No whipping up the crowd.
"I'm really good at whipping up meals.
But whipping up attention isn't the same as establishing credibility.
However, he blamed the media for "whipping up" tension.
He was whipping up the crowds yesterday with bellicose rhetoric.
Whipping up a batch of tonic water is fairly easy.
A storm was whipping up, and conditions were rapidly deteriorating.
"I think Vincent is very good at whipping up hysteria.
And neither candidate is capable of whipping up a crowd.
It was whipping up for a blow and Capt.
Was anything sexier than whipping up furniture on the fly?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com