Idioms for cast

    at a single cast, through a single action or event: He bankrupted himself at a single cast.

Origin of cast

1175–1225; Middle English casten < Old Norse kasta to throw

SYNONYMS FOR cast

1 See throw.
55 See turn.

OTHER WORDS FROM cast

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH cast

cast caste class

British Dictionary definitions for cast away

cast
/ (kɑːst) /

verb casts, casting or cast (mainly tr)

noun

Word Origin for cast

C13: from Old Norse kasta

Medical definitions for cast away

cast
[ kăst ]

n.

An object formed by the solidification of molten liquid poured into an impression or mold, as in a dental cast of the maxillary or mandibular arch.
A rigid dressing, usually made of gauze and plaster of Paris, used to immobilize an injured, fractured, or dislocated body part, as in a fracture or dislocation. plaster cast
A mass of fibrous material, coagulated protein, or exudate that has taken the form of the cavity in which it has been molded, such as the bronchial, renal, intestinal, or vaginal cavity, and that is found histologically as well as in urine or sputum samples.

Idioms and Phrases with cast away (1 of 2)

cast away

1

Also, cast aside. Discard, reject, as in He picked a book, then cast it aside, or She cast away all thoughts of returning home. [Early 1400s]

2

Squander, waste, as in She cast away a fortune on jewelry. Shakespeare used this idiom in King John (2:1): “France, hast thou yet more blood to cast away?” [Early 1500s]

Idioms and Phrases with cast away (2 of 2)

cast