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"Whistle and flute" is (Cockney) rhyming slang for suit. Generally, such slang is abridged to one word, losing the one which rhymes, making it difficult to get the reference. So a suit might be referred to as a 'whistle'. Few Cockneys use "Cockney rhyming slang" anymore and a lot of other people use it nowadays.
Use lemon juice! It shouln't be used over the mouth piece or else your in for a treat!
It's a song about oral sex, but the songwriter didn't want to just come out and say that, or the song would have been banned from radio airplay. It has long been a custom in pop music to use euphemism and innuendo when writing lyrics that might otherwise be controversial. Euphemism is a clever way of substituting another word for the bad word-- "the F-bomb" is a euphemism, and everybody knows what word you really wanted to say. In "Whistle," the singer uses innuendo, which means hinting about something without really coming out and saying it. He seems like he is talking about showing his girlfriend how to whistle (and in fact, he does whistle a few notes), but he is also talking about showing her how to put her lips on something else and blow it... in other words, his penis.
whistle meaqns to blow out some kind of air of our body when the inner air and the air outside cuts each other so the cutting forms this sound produced while whisteling and singing is when we blow out the sound from our throat. THANKS FOR INVOLVING ME IN THE ANSWER.
Yes, a singing voice contains many registers, using your upper and lower chest are two different things and when you speak your diaphragm is not used to produce the sound normally. a standard singing voice will also range between Upper, lower chest, falsetto, head voice and vocal fry. And the lucky few can use whistle register (Youtube Mariah Carey whistle register)