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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
throwback
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ He is a throwback, the New Age kid who is making millions, but plays because he likes to play.
▪ The antics were a throwback to earlier days at the Springs.
▪ The shift of power, ironically, is a throwback to the traditional House power structure.
▪ This term, a throwback to the early 1970s, is well past retirement age.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
throwback

throwback \throw"back\, n.

  1. the reappearance in an organism of characteristics of an earlier ancestral type; atavism.

  2. an organisms having characteristics of an earlier ancestral type.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
throwback

also throw-back, "reversion to an ancestral type or character," 1888, from throw (v.) + back (adv.); earlier it meant "a reverse in a course or progress, a relapse" (1856).

Wiktionary
throwback

n. 1 A reversion to an earlier stage of development. 2 An organism that has characteristics of a more primitive form. 3 An atavism. 4 A person similar to an ancestor, or something new similar to what already existed.

WordNet
throwback
  1. adj. characteristic of an atavist [syn: atavistic, throwback(a)]

  2. n. an organism that has the characteristics of a more primitive type of that organism [syn: atavist]

  3. a reappearance of an earlier characteristic [syn: atavism, reversion]

Wikipedia
Throwback

Throwback may refer to:

  • Evolutionary throwback, a reversion to ancestral type
  • Throwback (drink), a 2009 brand of soft drink
Throwback (3/3)

Throwback is a public artwork by American artist Tony Smith, located at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., United States. This version is the third of an edition of three in the series with one artist's proof.

Throwback (song)

"Throwback" is a song by American recording artist Usher, taken from his fourth studio album, Confessions (2004). It was written by Rico Love, Patrick "J. Que" Smith, and Just Blaze, while production was handled by the latter. "Throwback" is influenced by 1970s funk and rock music. An R&B and soul song, it is built on a hip hop and jazzy beat, and samples Dionne Warwick's song " You're Gonna Need Me", written by Holland–Dozier–Holland.

Throwback (1/3)

Throwback (1/3) is a public artwork by American artist Tony Smith, located in the Marsh & McLennan Companies (MMC) Plaza at 1166 Avenue of the Americas in New York City, New York.

Usage examples of "throwback".

Genuine mystical or contemplative experiences, for example, are seen as a regression or throwback to infantile states of narcissism, oceanic adualism, indissociation, and even primitive autism.

But that would break one of his prime rules: he had to remain separate and aloof, a primitive throwback to earlier times uncontaminated by the gentler present.

Ryba had intimated that the place was almost a throwback to the white demons of Rationalism, but again, in almost two years no traders or locals had mentioned Cyador.

Perhaps Priestess Poogli is a throwback and senses somehow that this latter-day monosexuality is like a last gasp of a dying civilization and that, food or no food, unless there is a return to the duosexual era, the race of Sacred Fishers is doomed.

Chissis spoke seldom, and then only in the throwback protolanguage, Primal Delphin.

You should see these hairy-jawed throwbacks, these turd lookalikes, honking and chomping at the trough.

A throwback to the days when trial lawyers actually tried their cases.

An occasional throwback to the Persian strain provided someone slight and smooth and creamy-dark, but Mithridates Eupator was a true Germano-Celt.

Compared to the sniping, weasely sons of bitches who had been leading America for the last few decades, he seemed like a throwback to the days when leaders were leaders, when there was such a thing as a great man.

Half of the Saturday Night Live cast is there, along with the press, and assorted antiwar protestors, long-haired throwbacks to the sixties.

He was, so he admitted, and her heart filled the gaps her intellect failed to bridge, a throwback, an atavism, a creature unable to catch the progress of his kind.

It was a throwback to a less civilized epoch of Nar development, when two primitive decapods, meeting for the first time on some tidal flat, would literally have sounded each other out before entrusting their tender inner parts to a stranger.

At night it would drop to near freezing, and in December it would start raining, and the dry lakes would fill up with a few inches of water, and some sort of putrid prehistoric shrimps would work their way up from out of the ooze, and sea gulls would come flying in a hundred miles or more from the ocean, over the mountains, to gobble up these squirming little throwbacks.

Those greasy goombas plunking down an obscene number of quarters to win prizes for their girlfriends—tacky '80s throwbacks whose Aqua Net-shellacked bangs are surpassed in height only by the heels of the Payless pumps that are constantly caught between the wooden planks as they walk.

Such physical strength is a rarity, a kind of genetic aberration which could be a throwback to prehistory, to a primitive construction of muscle fiber quite dissimilar to our own.