offcast
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English ofcasten, equivalent to off- + cast. Cognate with Danish afkaste (“to shed”), Swedish avkasta (“to crop, throw off, yield”).
The noun is possibly derived from Middle English ofcast (“the refuse of plants”).
Verb
[edit]offcast (third-person singular simple present offcasts, present participle offcasting, simple past and past participle offcast)
- (transitive) to cast off; shed.
- (transitive, theater, television) to remove from the cast of a production.
- 1985, Tino Balio, The American film industry:
- The experiment to offcast Davis began in 1937 with That Certain Woman; "She's a lady," we are told.
- 1997, Ann M. Sperber, Eric Lax, Bogart:
- [...] and Paramount was not inclined to offcast its stars, the story was dropped.
- 2015, Emily Carman, Independent Stardom:
- White actresses were able to maintain a more multidimensional star persona than actresses of color, thanks in large part to their ability to off-cast themselves in challenging roles and control their off-screen image through publicity.
Noun
[edit]offcast (plural offcasts)