throw down

English dictionary entry

Meanings

verb
  1. To cause something one is holding to drop, often forcefully.
  2. To destroy or demolish.
  3. To produce or perform (something) admirably or forcefully.
  4. To accomplish or produce something in a grand, respectable, or successful manner; to "represent".
  5. To drink a large amount quickly.
  6. To fight; to make a stand.
  7. To make an individual contribution to a group effort (e.g. money pool, collaborative record album).

Pronunciation

En-au-throw down.ogg

Word forms

throw down throws down throwing down threw down thrown down

Etymology

US, popularized 1970s in street culture, from idiom throw down the gauntlet (“to issue a challenge”), used in sense “to fight, to incite a fight, to make a stand” or otherwise get about partying with abandon (first used by Jay Johnson in Detroit in 1978 - taken nationally by Cecil Franklin, manager/brother of Aretha Franklin). Sense of “accomplish something respectable” evolved from sense “to make a stand, to exhibit, to demonstrate (in a challenging way)” inherent in the fighting sense. Sense of “to make a contribution” likely influenced by sense “to make a stand”, as in “are you in?”, “will you stand up and contribute?”

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