Football tickets are expensive at fifty bucks a throw.
To chuck a single Tomahawk Tomahawk Similar to a hatchet but designed to be thrown Can also be used to split kindling
If something throws light or a shadow on a surface, it causes that surface to have light or a shadow on it. The sunlight is white and blinding, throwing hard-edged shadows on the ground. = cast
In speakers and in microphones, the amount of movement that the diaphragm can make (without restriction) to produce or pickup the sound wave
to put into a state or activity hastily, suddenly, or carelessly; "Jane threw dinner together"; "throw the car into reverse"
when a wrestler is lifted off the mat (both feet) by an opponent and brought back down behind the thrower
Or toss One throw consists of tossing two washers, one at a time Who tosses first is determined by "diddle" or by whomever scored last Throws are always underhand
The amount of vertical displacement produced by a fault; according to the direction it is designated as an upthrow, or a downthrow
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
A pair maneuver in which one partner jumps while the other partner assists in the takeoff in a supporting role so that the jumping partner attains greater height in the air than if that partner had jumped without assistance