throw out
91throw one's toys out of the pram — see under ↑toy • • • Main Entry: ↑pram throw one s toys out of the pram (slang) To have a tantrum • • • Main Entry: ↑toy …
92throw something out the window — throw (something) out the window informal : to stop using or thinking about (something) We can throw that idea out the window. • • • Main Entry: ↑window …
93throw — throw, cast, fling, hurl, pitch, toss, sling can all mean to cause to move swiftly forward, sideways, upward, or downward by a propulsive movement (as of the arm) or by means of a propelling instrument or agency. Throw, the general word, is often …
94throw the baby out with the bath water — throw away something good with the waste, discard everything Keep the good subjects when you revise the course. Don t throw the baby out with the bath water! …
95throw a wobbly — (informal) To have a fit of hysterics or a tantrum, or behave otherwise unnervingly • • • Main Entry: ↑wobble * * * throw a wobbly phrase to react in a very angry way to something that someone says or does Mum threw a wobbly when I spilt my drink …
96throw your toys out of the pram — To make an angry protest against a relatively minor problem, in the process embarrassing the protester. The analogy is with a baby who throws toys out of the pram in order to get their parent to pay attention to them. The implication in the idiom …
97throw somebody out (of … ) — ˌthrow sbˈout (of…) derived to force sb to leave a place • You ll be thrown out if you don t pay the rent. Main entry: ↑throwderived …
98Out of This Furnace —   …
99throw the baby out with the bathwater — ► throw the baby out with the bathwater discard something valuable along with things that are undesirable. Main Entry: ↑baby …
100Throw-crook — n. (Agric.) An instrument used for twisting ropes out of straw. [1913 Webster] [1913 Webster] …