mistoss
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]mistoss (third-person singular simple present mistosses, present participle mistossing, simple past and past participle mistossed)
- To toss incorrectly.
- 1980, Stanley Green, Rodgers and Hammerstein Fact Book, page 126:
- A young riveter follows a mistossed bolt into a rich girl's boudoir to prevent a fire.
- 1989, Miles Wilson, Line of Fall, page 70:
- I worked with absolute focus, as though mistossing one piece of brush might make the difference.
- 2010, Peter Matthiessen, Shadow Country:
- The warm and limber hand that had offered nuts or berries, caught my mistossed balls, set young “Mast' Edguh” on his feet after a fall?
- 2012, Francesca Clementis, Big Girls Don't Cry:
- When she was in stretching distance of the mattress, she keeled over rigidly like a caber that had been mistossed.
- 2019, Toby Karten, Mindfulness in the Inclusive Classroom, page 3:
- Demonstrate repeated miscommunication by asking students to gather in a circle as they mis-toss a soft foam ball to one another.
Noun
[edit]mistoss (plural mistosses)
- An instance of mistossing.
- 2006, Mark Binelli, Sacco and Vanzetti Must Die!:
- Accused one another of intentional mistosses during live performances.