Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    take off

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. TAKE SOMETHING OFF definition: 1. to remove something, especially clothes: 2. to spend time away from your work: 3. If an…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of TAKEOFF is a rise or leap from a surface in making a jump or flight or an ascent in an aircraft or in the launching of a rocket. How to use takeoff in a sentence.

  4. If you take someone off, you imitate them and the things that they do and say, in such a way that you make other people laugh. [ mainly British ] Mike can take off his father to perfection.

  5. to suddenly leave without telling anyone where you are going: He took off in the middle of the night. take-off. noun. uk / ˈteɪkɒf / us. take-off noun (AIRCRAFT) the time when an aircraft leaves the ground and begins to fly. take-off noun (COPY) a film, book, etc that copies someone else's style in a way that is funny.

  6. take something off something. to remove an amount of money or a number of marks, points, etc. in order to reduce the total. The manager took $10 off the bill. That experience took ten years off my life (= made me feel ten years older).

  7. a piece of acting or writing, etc. that copies the way a particular person speaks or behaves, or the way something is done, usually to entertain other people: It was the best takeoff of the mayor that I have ever seen. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  8. Takeoff definition: a taking or setting off; the leaving of the ground, as in leaping or in beginning a flight in an airplane.. See examples of TAKEOFF used in a sentence.

  9. take off meaning, definition, what is take off: to remove a piece of clothing: Learn more.

  10. takeoff in British English. (ˈteɪkˌɒf ) noun. 1. the act or an instance of a plane leaving the ground and beginning to fly. The aircraft crashed after takeoff from Heathrow in a reservoir. The commuter plane was waiting for takeoff. The plane was waiting for takeoff. 2. informal.

  11. (informal) to leave a place; to make someone leave a place. take somebody off something. [often passive] to remove someone from something such as a job, position, piece of equipment, etc. The officer leading the investigation has been taken off the case. After three days she was taken off the ventilator. take something off something.

  1. Searches related to take off means

    quantity take off means