資料來源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Cast \Cast\, n. [Cf. Icel., Dan., & Sw. kast.]
1. The act of casting or throwing; a throw.
2. The thing thrown.
A cast of dreadful dust. --Dryden.
3. The distance to which a thing is or can be thrown. ``About
a stone's cast.'' --Luke xxii. 41.
4. A throw of dice; hence, a chance or venture.
An even cast whether the army should march this way
or that way. --Sowth.
I have set my life upon a cast, And I will stand the
hazard of the die. --Shak.
5. That which is throw out or off, shed, or ejected; as, the
skin of an insect, the refuse from a hawk's stomach, the
excrement of a earthworm.
6. The act of casting in a mold.
And why such daily cast of brazen cannon. --Shak.
7. An impression or mold, taken from a thing or person;
amold; a pattern.
8. That which is formed in a mild; esp. a reproduction or
copy, as of a work of art, in bronze or plaster, etc.; a
casting.
9. Form; appearence; mien; air; style; as, a peculiar cast of
countenance. ``A neat cast of verse.'' --Pope.
An heroic poem, but in another cast and figure.
--Prior.
And thus the native hue of resolution Is sicklied
o'er with the pale cast of thought. --Shak.
10. A tendency to any color; a tinge; a shade.
Gray with a cast of green. --Woodward.
11. A chance, opportunity, privilege, or advantage;
specifically, an opportunity of riding; a lift. [Scotch]
We bargained with the driver to give us a cast to
the next stage. --Smollett.
If we had the cast o' a cart to bring it. --Sir W.
Scott.
12. The assignment of parts in a play to the actors.
13. (Falconary) A flight or a couple or set of hawks let go
at one time from the hand. --Grabb.
As when a cast of falcons make their flight.
--Spenser.
14. A stoke, touch, or trick. [Obs.]
This was a cast of Wood's politics; for his
information was wholly false. --Swift.
15. A motion or turn, as of the eye; direction; look; glance;
squint.
The cast of the eye is a gesture of aversion.
--Bacon.
And let you see with one cast of an eye. --Addison.
This freakish, elvish cast came into the child's
eye. --Hawthorne.
16. A tube or funnel for conveying metal into a mold.
17. Four; that is, as many as are thrown into a vessel at
once in counting herrings, etc; a warp.
18. Contrivance; plot, design. [Obs.] --Chaucer.
{A cast of the eye}, a slight squint or strabismus.
{Renal cast} (Med.), microscopic bodies found in the urine of
persons affected with disease of the kidneys; -- so called
because they are formed of matter deposited in, and
preserving the outline of, the renal tubes.
{The last cast}, the last throw of the dice or last effort,
on which every thing is ventured; the last chance.