Castaway vs Fadeaway - What's the difference?
castaway | fadeaway |
Cast adrift or ashore; marooned.
Shipwrecked.
(nautical) A shipwrecked sailor.
A discarded person or thing.
An outcast; someone cast out of a group or society.
An instance of fading away, of diminishing in proximity or intensity.
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(basketball) a jump shot made while jumping backwards, away from the basket. The goal is to create space between the shooter and the defender, making it much harder to block.
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=February 3, author=Howard Beck, title=Bryant Puts on a Show, Setting Garden Records, work=New York Times
, passage=He taunted the Knicks instead with hanging jumpers, impossible fadeaways and layups in traffic.}}
As nouns the difference between castaway and fadeaway
is that castaway is (nautical) a shipwrecked sailor while fadeaway is an instance of fading away, of diminishing in proximity or intensity.As an adjective castaway
is cast adrift or ashore; marooned.castaway
English
Adjective
(-)- After the mutiny, the castaway ship's officers suffered a month at sea in the lifeboat.
- The storm left them castaway on an uninhabited island.
Noun
(en noun)- Robinson Crusoe was a famous fictional castaway .
- This old coat was a castaway in someone's trash.
- These homeless people are society's castaways .
Synonyms
* See alsofadeaway
English
Noun
(en noun)citation