verb, cast, cast⋅ing, noun, adjective | 1. | to throw or hurl; fling: The gambler cast the dice. |
| 2. | to throw off or away: He cast the advertisement in the wastebasket. |
| 3. | to direct (the eye, a glance, etc.), esp. in a cursory manner: She cast her eyes down the page. |
| 4. | to cause to fall upon something or in a certain direction; send forth: to cast a soft light; to cast a spell; to cast doubts. |
| 5. | to draw (lots), as in telling fortunes. |
| 6. | Angling.
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| 7. | to throw down or bring to the ground: She cast herself on the sofa. |
| 8. | to part with; lose: The horse cast a shoe. |
| 9. | to shed or drop (hair, fruit, etc.): The snake cast its skin. |
| 10. | (of an animal) to bring forth (young), esp. abortively. |
| 11. | to send off (a swarm), as bees do. |
| 12. | to throw or set aside; discard or reject; dismiss: He cast the problem from his mind. |
| 13. | to throw forth, as from within; emit or eject; vomit. |
| 14. | to throw up (earth, sod, etc.), as with a shovel. |
| 15. | to put or place, esp. hastily or forcibly: to cast someone in prison. |
| 16. | to deposit or give (a ballot or vote). |
| 17. | to bestow; confer: to cast blessings upon someone. |
| 18. | to make suitable or accordant; tailor: He cast his remarks to fit the occasion. |
| 19. | Theater.
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| 20. | to form (an object) by pouring metal, plaster, etc., in a fluid state into a mold and letting it harden. |
| 21. | to form (metal, plaster, etc.) into a particular shape by pouring it into a mold in a fluid state and letting it harden. |
| 22. | to tap (a blast furnace). |
| 23. | to compute or calculate; add, as a column of figures. |
| 24. | to compute or calculate (a horoscope) astrologically; forecast. |
| 25. | to turn or twist; warp. |
| 26. | Nautical. to turn the head of (a vessel), esp. away from the wind in getting under way. |
| 27. | Fox Hunting. (of a hunter) to lead or direct (hounds) over ground believed to have been recently traveled by a fox. |
| 28. | Archaic. to contrive, devise, or plan. |
| 29. | Obsolete. to ponder. |
| 30. | to throw. |
| 31. | to receive form in a mold. |
| 32. | to calculate or add. |
| 33. | to conjecture; forecast. |
| 34. | (of hounds) to search an area for scent: The setter cast, but found no scent. |
| 35. | to warp, as timber. |
| 36. | Nautical. (of a vessel) to turn, esp. to get the head away from the wind; tack. |
| 37. | to select the actors for a play, motion picture, or the like. |
| 38. | Obsolete.
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| 39. | act of casting or throwing. |
| 40. | that which is thrown. |
| 41. | the distance to which a thing may be cast or thrown. |
| 42. | Games.
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| 43. | Angling.
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| 44. | Theater. the group of performers to whom parts are assigned; players. |
| 45. | Hunting. a searching of an area for a scent by hounds. |
| 46. | a stroke of fortune; fortune or lot. |
| 47. | a ride offered on one's way; lift. |
| 48. | the form in which something is made or written; arrangement. |
| 49. | Metallurgy.
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| 50. | something formed from a material poured into a mold in a molten or liquid state; casting. |
| 51. | an impression or mold made from something. |
| 52. | Medicine/Medical. a rigid surgical dressing, usually made of bandage treated with plaster of Paris. |
| 53. | outward form; appearance. |
| 54. | sort; kind; style. |
| 55. | tendency; inclination. |
| 56. | a permanent twist or turn: to have a cast in one's eye. |
| 57. | a warp. |
| 58. | a slight tinge of some color; hue; shade: A good diamond does not have a yellowish cast. |
| 59. | a dash or trace; a small amount. |
| 60. | computation; calculation; addition. |
| 61. | a conjecture; forecast. |
| 62. | Zoology. something that is shed, ejected, or cast off or out, as molted skin, a feather, food from a bird's crop, or the coil of sand and waste passed by certain earthworms. |
| 63. | Ornithology. pellet (def. 6). |
| 64. | Falconry. a pair of hawks put in flight together. |
| 65. | Pathology. effused plastic matter produced in the hollow parts of various diseased organs. |
| 66. | low-grade, irregular wool. |
| 67. | (of an animal, esp. a horse) lying in such a position that it is unable to return to its feet without assistance. |
| 68. | cast about,
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| 69. | cast away,
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| 70. | cast back, to refer to something past; revert to: The composer casts back to his earlier work. |
| 71. | cast down, to lower; humble. |
| 72. | cast off,
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| 73. | cast on, Textiles. to set (yarn) on a needle in order to form the initial stitches in knitting. |
| 74. | cast out, to force out; expel; eject. |
| 75. | cast up,
|
| 76. | at a single cast, through a single action or event: He bankrupted himself at a single cast. |
cast (kāst) v. cast, cast·ing, casts v. tr.
cast about/around
cast outTo drive out by force; expel. Idiom(s): cast (one's) lot withTo join or side with for better or worse. [Middle English casten, from Old Norse kasta.] |
cast (kāst)
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. Also called 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.
cast out
Forcibly drive out, expel, as in We have to cast out these old-fashioned ideas and methods. [Late 1200s]