throw shade
English
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Verb
throw shade (third-person singular simple present throws shade, present participle throwing shade, simple past threw shade, past participle thrown shade)
- (originally gay slang) To subtly insult someone.
- 1994, bell hooks, chapter 7, in Outlaw Culture: Resisting Representations:
- To begin with, I need to make it clear to those who don’t know that the throwing-shade, dissin’, “reading” style that carried Miss Camille to fame was a persona she assembled after years of ethnographically studying the mannerisms of vernacular black culture, especially black gay sub-culture, and most especially the culture of the black queen.
- 2014 December 10, Gina Vaynshteyn, “Emotional Stages of Hating to Loving Taylor Swift”, in Bustle:
- Wait, 1989 is actually really, really good. It feels genuine, and only slightly entitled, and mostly awesome. You like how it throws shade, but not too much shade.
- 2018 July 17, “Queen Elizabeth may have thrown shade at President Trump with her brooches”, in AOL:
- And while the meeting made headlines in other ways -- like when POTUS left the queen waiting for 10 minutes on live TV as he was running late -- no one picked up on the subtle shade Queen Elizabeth may have thrown at Trump on three separate occasions.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see throw, shade.
See also
References
- “throw shade”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
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