throw away
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English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]throw away (third-person singular simple present throws away, present participle throwing away, simple past threw away, past participle thrown away)
- (transitive) To discard (trash, garbage, or the like), to toss out, to put in the trash.
- Synonym: see at discard
- He wanted to throw away the cup, but he couldn't find a trash can.
- Don't throw the newspaper away, it goes in the recycle bin!
- (transitive, figuratively) To waste, to squander.
- Voting for a third-party candidate sometimes feels like throwing your vote away.
- The team threw away its chance at the semifinals.
- 1975, Freddie Mercury, “Bohemian Rhapsody” (song), in Queen (band), A Night at the Opera (album):
- Mama, life has just begun. / But now I've gone and thrown it all away.
- 2011 September 28, Jon Smith, “Valencia 1 - 1 Chelsea”, in BBC Sport[1]:
- Chelsea threw away two points when substitute Salomon Kalou gifted Valencia a penalty five minutes from time with a needless handball.
- (American football, slang) To intentionally throw an incomplete pass.
- (idiomatic) To give lightly, in an offhand manner.
- 2017 August 13, Brandon Nowalk, “Oldtown offers one last game-changing secret as Game Of Thrones goes behind enemy lines (newbies)”, in The Onion AV Club[2]:
- As Gilly plays sitcom wife, reading aloud from a book while Sam tries to read his own across the table, she throws away a line about someone named Maynard once having annulled the marriage of someone named Prince Raggar and remarrying him in the same ceremony in Dorne.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]discard or dispose of
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