Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word
offthrow. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
offthrow, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
offthrow in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
offthrow you have here. The definition of the word
offthrow will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
offthrow, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology
From off- + throw.
Noun
offthrow (countable and uncountable, plural offthrows)
- The act of throwing off; (by extension) liberation
1871, The Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, page 3:The theory of a rise of a dome of strata from beneath the sea and the offthrow of the waters on all sides from that dome, their escape through lateral fractures in the upheaved chalk, together with a slow wearing back of the fractured and denuded edges of the chalk in the form of cliffs, […]
1879, John S. Stuart-Glennie, Europe and Asia:Improbable, therefore, it is that the offthrow of the Ottoman yoke by the former, will not be followed by the offthrow of the German and Russian yokes by the latter, Nationalities.
2013, C. W. Previté-Orton, Outlines of Medieval History, page 194:A general ferment, in fact, far different from the anarchy and barbaric invasions, was set up over Europe by these vast offthrows of activity by the French nobles, who thereby unconsciously made amends for the temporary misery they inflicted on their own country.
- That which is thrown off (i.e. discarded, ejected, or emitted)
1848, Clifton Cleve, The book of inventions, page 20:[…] comparatively speaking, few are convinced of, or perhaps acquainted with the fact, that not only do the bed-clothes intercept and retain a large proportion of this offthrow, but that it penetrates both beds and mattresses, which actually absorb a large proprtion of it, […]
1864, William Chambers, A History of Peeblesshire, page 515:In this latter or northern offthrow, nearly the whole of Peeblesshire consists, and the general dip or inclination of its rocks is accordingly northerly, or more strictly, towards north-north-west.
2002, Charles G. Finney, The Circus of Dr. Lao, page 50:These are the sports, the offthrows, of the universe instead of the species; these are the weird children of the lust of the spheres.
2004, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Arnold V. Miller, Hegel's Philosophy of Nature:One has, in fact, the old choice of regarding the higher integrations as queer offthrows of an infinitely improbable lower-order accident, or as the explanatory foundation of all that leads up to them.
2013, Robert Silverberg, Sailing to Byzantium:In its wake the ship leaves a photonic track so intense that it could be gathered up and weighed. It is the stardrive that issues this light: a ship eats space, and light is its offthrow.
2014, Andre Norton, Tales from High Hallack Volume Three:If Herta wished to burden herself with an extra mouth during the lean months, the care of a stranger's offthrow — that was her business.
Verb
offthrow (third-person singular simple present offthrows, present participle offthrowing, simple past offthrew, past participle offthrown)
- (transitive, intransitive) To throw or cast off (all senses)
1858, John Ashford, London; Past, Present and Future, page 9:Thorns of the flesh in childhood man offthrows,
Or passions such in headlong youth he knows; […]
1933, Corliss Lamont, Margaret Lamont, Russia Day by Day: A Travel Diary, volume 20, page 35:" […] I stand a scarecrow in this land
That offthrew the yoke of autocracy."
Anagrams