throw
Meaning of throw
verb
- To change place.
- To change in state or status
- To move through time.
- To be accepted.
- In any game, to decline to play in one's turn.
- To do or be better.
- To take heed.
- The flight of a thrown object.
What a great throw by the quarterback!
- The act of throwing something.
The gambler staked everything on one throw of the dice.
- One's ability to throw.
He's always had a pretty decent throw.
- A distance travelled; displacement.
the throw of the piston
- A piece of fabric used to cover a bed, sofa or other soft furnishing.
- A single instance, occurrence, venture, or chance.
Football tickets are expensive at fifty bucks a throw.
- A violent effort.
- To hurl; to cause an object to move rapidly through the air.
throw a shoe; throw a javelin; the horse threw its rider
- To eject or cause to fall off.
- To move to another position or condition; to displace.
throw the switch
- To make (a pot) by shaping clay as it turns on a wheel.
- (of a bowler) to deliver (the ball) illegally by straightening the bowling arm during delivery.
- To send (an error) to an exception-handling mechanism in order to interrupt normal processing.
If the file is read-only, the method throws an invalid-operation exception.
- To intentionally lose a game.
The tennis player was accused of taking bribes to throw the match.
- To confuse or mislead.
The deliberate red herring threw me at first.
- To send desperately.
Their sergeant threw the troops into pitched battle.
- To imprison.
The magistrate ordered the suspect to be thrown into jail.
- To organize an event, especially a party.
- To roll (a die or dice).
- To cause a certain number on the die or dice to be shown after rolling it.
- To discard.
- To lift the opponent off the ground and bring him back down, especially into a position behind the thrower.
- (said of one's voice) To change in order to give the illusion that the voice is that of someone else.
- To show sudden emotion, especially anger.
- To project or send forth.
- To put on hastily; to spread carelessly.
- To twist two or more filaments of (silk, etc.) so as to form one thread; to twist together, as singles, in a direction contrary to the twist of the singles themselves; sometimes applied to the whole class of operations by which silk is prepared for the weaver.
- (of a team, a manager, etc.) To select (a pitcher); to assign a pitcher to a given role (such as starter or reliever).
- To install (a bridge).
- To twist or turn.
a thrown nail
- Pain, especially pain associated with childbirth; throe.
- The act of giving birth in animals, especially in cows.
verb
(said of animals) To give birth to.
noun- A moment, time, occasion.
- A period of time; a while.
Information about throw
- The plural form of throw is: throws.
- Languages in which throw is used:
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Hyphenation of throw
throw
- It consists of 1 syllables and 5 chars.
- throw is a word monosyllabic because it has one syllable
throw synonyms
Meaning stroke:
Meaning shed:
Meaning thrust:
Meaning give:
Meaning flip:
Meaning project:
Meaning bewilder:
bewilder, bemuse, discombobulate
Meaning hurl:
Meaning hold:
Meaning confuse:
confuse, fox, befuddle, fuddle, bedevil, confound, discombobulate
Meaning :
spend, pledge, promise, vow, bowl, bung, buzz, catapult, chuck, dash, direct, fire, fling, heave, launch, lob, pitch, propel, send, shoot, shy, sling, toss, whang, eject, displace, relocate, stound
Translation of throw
- German: schmeißen, werfen, abwerfen
- French: jeter, désarçonner
- Spanish: arrojar, lanzar, despeñar, dar, hacer, organizar
- Portuguese: atirar, lançar, jogar, arremessar
- Italian: lanciare, gettare, disarcionare, dare, tenere
Anagrams of throw
rowth, whort, Worth, worth, wroth
Words that rhyme with throw
shrow, Heathrow, downthrow, inthrow, misthrow, outthrow, overthrow, preoverthrow, rethrow, upthrow, windthrow
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