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bells and whistles
plural noun
- features added to a product; special parts or functions; extras.
bells and whistles
plural noun
- additional features or accessories which are nonessential but very attractive
my car has all the latest bells and whistles
- additions, such as options or warranties, made to a financial product to increase its market appeal
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of bells and whistles1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of bells and whistles1
Example Sentences
The British state had done its best to give the Ukrainian president "all bells and whistles" when he arrived in the UK for a summit with 18 world leaders after his dressing down by Donald Trump and JD Vance on Friday night, a government source told me.
Instead, the attention-getters were the technological bells and whistles.
Bring the intensity and work rate and aggression and character of Thursday against Tottenham to Hampden - achieved, with bells and whistles attached.
It's not a gimmick or a schtick, this is a fully-fledged game of football, at Cliftonhill on Saturday at three o'clock, with all the bells and whistles and with three points on the line.
Even when taking into account efforts like Elon Musk’s supposed army of paid volunteers, Harris’s on-the-ground efforts are three times the size of Trump’s, according to the Washington Post: “She boasts more staff, more volunteers, a larger surrogate operation, more digital advertising, a more sophisticated smartphone-based organizing program and extra money for extraneous bells and whistles typically reserved for corporate product launches and professional sports championships.â€
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