different between defenestrate vs throwout

defenestrate

English

Etymology

Back-formation from defenestration, from Latin de- (out) + fenestra (window).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /d??f?n?st?e?t/
  • (US) IPA(key): /d??f?n?st?e?t/

Verb

defenestrate (third-person singular simple present defenestrates, present participle defenestrating, simple past and past participle defenestrated)

  1. (transitive) To eject or throw (someone or something) from a window; compare transfenestrate.
    • 1998 September 25, Lane Smith, quoted in "TFK Q&A: Lane Smith and Jon Scieszka", in Time for Kids:
      I defenestrated a clock to see if time flies!
  2. (transitive) To throw out; to remove or dismiss (someone) from a position of power or authority.
    • 1998, Barry J. Fraser and Kenneth George Tobin, International Handbook of Science Education, Volume 2,
      The cultural historians of science 'feel the need to defenestrate science, or at least take it off its pedestal' (Pumfrey. Rossi & Slawinski 1991. p. 3).
    • 2001, The Economist, Volume 381, Issues 8498-8501, Page 42,
      Ever since he helped to defenestrate Richard Nixon in 1974, Mr Woodward has been a sort of super-reporter ...
  3. (computing, transitive, humorous, slang) To remove a Windows operating system from a computer.
    • 1998 December 17, Darren Salt <[email protected]>, "Re: Coding speccy games in the good 'ole days", message-ID <48B60EA729%[email protected]>, comp.sys.sinclair, Usenet [1]:
      This posting was written on a Windows 95 PC,
      Defenestrate it immediately. Install Linux. :-)
    • 2001 July 21, "Packet Rat" (pseudonym), "Judge Rat calls for a Microsoft defenestration", on GCN: Government Computer News:
      ? Enable one-click uninstalls of unwanted OS and application features with a Defenestrate icon.
    • 2007 May 16, Richard Stallman, speech, Free Software and Beyond: Human Rights in the Use of Software and Other Published Works,
      Now of course people who want freedom shouldn't use Windows at all, you've got to defenestrate your computer, which mean either you throw Windows out of the computer, or you throw the computer out the window.

Translations

References

  • “defenestrate” in PC Magazine Encyclopedia.

See also

  • Defenestration on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Defenestrations of Prague on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Italian

Verb

defenestrate

  1. second-person plural present indicative of defenestrare
  2. second-person plural imperative of defenestrare

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throwout

English

Etymology

From throw out, in the sense of having been thrown out of society.

Noun

throwout (plural throwouts)

  1. (printing) A folded sheet that opens out to one side; half a gatefold.
  2. (rare) One who has been rejected by society; an outcast.
    • 1963, Fred Majdalany, State of Emergency: The Full Story of Mau Mau (page 228)
      The first category were throwouts of the Police Reserve and the prisons organization who avenged themselves on these bodies that had rejected them by inventing and spreading accusations of malpractices.

Anagrams

  • outthrow, outworth

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