throe
Meanings
Plural: throes
Noun
- severe spasm of pain
- "the throes of dying"
- "the throes of childbirth"
- hard or painful trouble or struggle
- "a country in the throes of economic collapse"
- A severe pang or spasm of pain, especially one experienced when the uterus contracts during childbirth, or when a person is about to die.
- A severe pang or spasm of pain, especially one experienced when the uterus contracts during childbirth, or when a person is about to die.
- The pain of labour or childbirth; the suffering of death.
- Any severe pang or spasm, especially an outburst of feeling; a paroxysm.
- A hard struggle, especially one associated with the beginning or finishing of a task.
- Synonym of froe (“a cleaving tool for splitting cask staves and shingles from a block of wood”).
Verb
- To cause (someone) to feel throes, as if in childbirth; to put in agony.
- To feel throes; to struggle in extreme pain; to be in agony; to agonize.
Origin / Etymology
The noun is probably derived partly:
* from Middle English throu, throwe (“(chiefly in the plural) uterine contraction during the birth of a child; pain experienced while giving birth; suffering; a pain; emotional distress, anxiety”) [and other forms], perhaps from:
** Old English þrawu (rare), a variant of þrēa (“affliction, torment; disaster; oppression; a rebuke; severity; threat”), from Proto-West Germanic *þrau, from Proto-Germanic *þrawō (“longing; suffering”), from Proto-Indo-European *trewh₁-; and
** Old English þrōwian (“to endure, suffer”), from Proto-Germanic *þrōwijaną, probably from *þrawō (see above); and
** Old Norse þrá (“longing, yearning”), from Proto-Germanic *þrawō (see above); and
* from Middle English throuen (“to endure distress, suffer; to be ill, to have a fever; to suffer (death, hardship, illness, punishment, etc.); to endure (sadness, hard work, etc.)”) [and other forms], from Old English þrōwian (see above).
The current spelling of the word is a 16th-century variant of Middle English throu, throwe, perhaps to avoid confusion with throw (“act of turning or twisting; fit of bad temper or peevishness; look of anger, bad temper, irritation, etc., a grimace”).
The verb is derived:
* from the noun; and
* perhaps from Middle English throuen (verb) (see above).
Synonyms
ache, afflict, aggrieve, agonize, anguish, dere, excruciate, froe, frow, hurt, irritate, pain, pang, passion, pine, rack, suffer, thole, throe, torment, torture, wark, wring
Scrabble Score: 8
throe is a valid Scrabble (US) TWL wordthroe is a valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
throe is a valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary