| MISTHREW | • misthrew v. Simple past tense of misthrow. • MISTHROW v. to throw errantly. |
| MISTHROW | • misthrow v. (Transitive) To throw incorrectly. • misthrow n. An incorrect throw. • MISTHROW v. to throw errantly. |
| DISTHRONE | • disthrone v. (Obsolete, transitive) To dethrone; to remove from the throne. • DISTHRONE v. to remove from a throne, also DETHRONE, UNTHRONE. |
| MISTHROWN | • misthrown v. Past participle of misthrow. • MISTHROW v. to throw errantly. |
| MISTHROWS | • misthrows v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of misthrow. • misthrows n. Plural of misthrow. • MISTHROW v. to throw errantly. |
| DISTHRONED | • disthroned v. Simple past tense and past participle of disthrone. • DISTHRONE v. to remove from a throne, also DETHRONE, UNTHRONE. |
| DISTHRONES | • disthrones v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disthrone. • DISTHRONE v. to remove from a throne, also DETHRONE, UNTHRONE. |
| DISTHRONING | • disthroning v. Present participle of disthrone. • DISTHRONE v. to remove from a throne, also DETHRONE, UNTHRONE. |
| DISTHRONISE | • DISTHRONISE v. (Spenser) to dethrone, also DISTHRONIZE. |
| DISTHRONIZE | • disthronize v. (Archaic, rare) To remove from the throne, to dethrone. • DISTHRONIZE v. (Spenser) to dethrone, also DISTHRONISE. |
| MISTHROWING | • misthrowing v. Present participle of misthrow. • MISTHROW v. to throw errantly. |
| DISTHRONISED | • DISTHRONISE v. (Spenser) to dethrone, also DISTHRONIZE. |
| DISTHRONISES | • DISTHRONISE v. (Spenser) to dethrone, also DISTHRONIZE. |
| DISTHRONIZED | • disthronized v. Simple past tense and past participle of disthronize. • DISTHRONIZE v. (Spenser) to dethrone, also DISTHRONISE. |
| DISTHRONIZES | • disthronizes v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disthronize. • DISTHRONIZE v. (Spenser) to dethrone, also DISTHRONISE. |
| DISTHRONISING | • DISTHRONISE v. (Spenser) to dethrone, also DISTHRONIZE. |
| DISTHRONIZING | • disthronizing v. Present participle of disthronize. • DISTHRONIZE v. (Spenser) to dethrone, also DISTHRONISE. |