Throes in a sentence as a noun

Pedantic, I know, but it should be "throes of."

I imagine the death throes of this dying industry are going to get worse before it gets better.

That is because Microsoft had already had it's crazy growth in the 80s and 90s while Apple came out of it's death throes in the 2000s.

One is that this type of founder is more omnivorous by nature, and even when in the throes of starting a startup, gets bored reading about nothing but startups.

And you think that this is a good set of people to be around?Also advice like, "grow a thicker skin" to someone that's in the throes of depression, might as well be advice to, "just stop being depressed.

Companies are literally in headline-making death throes because they can't get people like me, and when one of us shows up-- we aren't that rare, maybe 1 in ~100 software engineers-- they treat us like ****.

"He admits being torn on the subject, but that doesn't change that many able-bodied, mentally sound people can do more than they're necessarily capable of realizing while in the throes of despair.

So my running list of things that are obviously outdated and fruitlessly resisting their death throes now includes:- Auto dealerships - Music labels - Government secrecy

"Forget the complete absence of the evidence I asked for, this seemed like it was written by someone in the throes of full-blown psychosis or mania or schizophrenia with meaningless plans to somehow revolutionize the world.

As opposed to "real" money like the dozens that have totally crashed over the last few decades?I'm not planning on buying my groceries with bitcoins any time soon, but saying a four-year-old currency in the first throes of popularity and stress-testing, and using inadequate means for it at that, is "not real money" seems awfully shortsighted.

Throes definitions

noun

violent pangs of suffering; "death throes"