throw down
English
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “Source needed for the claim of Jay Johnson as first user.”)
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?”
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Verb
throw down (third-person singular simple present throws down, present participle throwing down, simple past threw down, past participle thrown down)
- (transitive) To cause something one is holding to drop, often forcefully.
- Synonyms: cast down, cast aside, throw aside
- The soldiers threw down their weapons and surrendered.
- (transitive, dated) To destroy or demolish.
- to throw down a tower
- (slang, idiomatic, transitive) to produce or perform (something) admirably or forcefully.
- 2001, Dave Thompson, Funk, back cover:
- ...this guide tracks the artists and recordings that throw down the funk!
- (slang, idiomatic, intransitive) to fight, incite to fight, or approach with the intent to fight; to make a stand.
- 2004, William Bowers, “I Think I'm Going to Hell”, in Da Capo Best Music Writing 2004, page 41:
- When someone near me at a show called the band My Boring Racket, I was ready to throw down, but for the good sense of an accompanying female...
- 2004, bell hooks, We Real Cool: Black Men and Masculinity, page 59:
- Today's young and hip black male who fancies himself a radical, who is ready to throw down for the cause, is not talking about neo-colonialism, about global struggle.
- (slang, idiomatic, intransitive, by extension) to accomplish or produce something in a grand, respectable, or successful manner; to "represent".
- (slang, idiomatic, intransitive) to make an individual contribution to a group effort (e.g. money pool, collaborative record album)
- "We're goin' in on a pizza; you in?" "Yeah, I'll throw down."
- (slang, idiomatic, intransitive) to drink a large amount quickly.
- "We need to finish these five pitchers in half an hour, so throw down as fast as you can!"