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    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. (informal) to leave a place, especially in a hurry. When he saw me coming he took off in the opposite direction. (of an idea, a product, etc.) to become successful or popular very quickly or suddenly. The new magazine has really taken off. Her singing career took off after her TV appearance. Topics Success c1. take somebody off.

  4. Take off = to become popular or successful. (intransitive – informal) This phrasal verb is used when a person’s success or rise in popularity is sudden or very quick. It can also refer to when a (new) product has quickly had a lot of sales, especially compared to normal. That new song by Samantha Star has really taken off in the charts.

  5. 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.

  6. 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.

  7. TAKE OFF definition: 1. If an aircraft takes off, it begins to fly. 2. to suddenly become successful: 3. to suddenly…. Learn more.

  8. 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.

  9. • This is your Captain speaking. We are due to take off in five minutes. • He took off the old handle and fixed a new one in its place. • A standard detergent should take most of the grease off the surface. • I'm going to take Thursday off to go to the dentist.

  10. To go or leave: took off in pursuit of the robber. To rise into the air or begin flight: The plane took off on time. To achieve success or popularity: a new movie that really took off.

  11. PUT OFF – phrasal verb – meanings and examples. The English phrasal verb PUT OFF has the following meanings: 1. Put off = to postpone (transitive) When the time or date of something is rescheduled to a later time, especially because of a problem. With this meaning you can have the object in the middle of the...

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