offed
下台了,下岗了,下场,下岗
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
- : so as to be no longer supported or attached: This button is about to come off.
- : so as to be no longer covering or enclosing: to take a hat off;to take the wrapping off.
- : away from a place: to run off;to look off toward the west.
- : away from a path, course, etc.; aside: This road branches off to Grove City.
- : so as to be away or on one's way: to start off early;to cast off.
- : away from what is considered normal, regular, standard, or the like: to go off on a tangent.
- : from a charge or price: He took 10 percent off for all cash purchases.
- : at a distance in space or future time: to back off a few feet;Summer is only a week off.
- : out of operation or effective existence: Turn the lights off.
- : into operation or action: The alarm goes off at noon.
- : so as to interrupt continuity or cause discontinuance: Negotiations have been broken off.
- : in absence from work, service, a job, etc.: two days off at Christmas.
- : completely; utterly: to kill off all the inhabitants.
- : with prompt or ready performance: to dash a letter off.
- : to fulfillment, or into execution or effect: The contest came off on the appointed day.
- : into nonexistence or nothingness: My headache passed off soon.
- : so as to be delineated, divided, or apportioned: Mark it off into equal parts.
- : away from a state of consciousness: I must have dozed off.
- : Nautical. away from the land, a ship, the wind, etc.
- 1
- : so as no longer to be supported by, attached to, on, resting on, or unified with: Take your feet off the table!Break a piece of bread off the loaf.
- : deviating from: off balance;off course.
- : below or less than the usual or expected level or standard: 20 percent off the marked price;I was off my golf game.
- : away, disengaged, or resting from: to be off duty on Tuesdays.
- : Informal. refraining or abstaining from; denying oneself the pleasure, company, practice, etc., of: He's off gambling.
- : away from; apart or distant from: a village off the main road.
- : leading into or away from: an alley off 12th Street.
- : not fixed on or directed toward, as the gaze, eyes, etc.: Their eyes weren't off the king for a moment.
- : Informal. from: I bought it off a street vendor.
- : from or of, indicating material or component parts: to lunch off cheese and fruit.
- : from or by such means or use of: living off an inheritance;living off his parents.
- : Nautical. at some distance to seaward of: off Cape Hatteras.
- 1
- : in error; wrong: You are off on that point.
- : slightly abnormal or not quite sane: He is a little off, but he's really harmless.
- : not up to standard; not so good or satisfactory as usual; inferior or subnormal: a good play full of off moments.
- : no longer in effect, in operation, or in process: The agreement is off.
- : stopped from flowing, as by the closing of a valve: The electricity is off.
- : in a specified state, circumstance, etc.: to be badly off for money.
- : free from work or duty; nonworking: a pastime for one's off hours.
- : not working at one's usual occupation: We're off Wednesdays during the summer.
- : of less than the ordinary activity, liveliness, or lively interest; slack: an off season in the tourist trade.
- : unlikely; remote; improbable: on the off chance that we'd find her at home.
- : more distant; farther: the off side of a wall.
- : of, being, or pertaining to the right as seen from the rider's or driver's viewpoint: the off horse;the off side.
- : starting on one's way; leaving: I'm off to Europe on Monday.They're off and running in the third race at Aqueduct.
- : lower in price or value; down: Stock prices were off this morning.
- : Nautical. noting one of two like things that is the farther from the shore; seaward: the off side of the ship.
- : Cricket. noting or pertaining to that side of the wicket or of the field opposite that on which the batsman stands.
- 1
- : the state or fact of being off.
- : Cricket. the off side.
- 1
- : to go off or away; leave: Off, and don't come back!
- 1
- : Slang. to kill; slay.
- 1
- : get off on. get.
Phrases
- off again, on again
- off and on
- off and running
- off balance
- off base
- off duty
- off guard
- off of
- off one's chest, get
- off one's feed
- off one's guard
- off one's head
- off one's high horse
- off one's rocker
- off someone's back
- off someone's feet
- off someone's hands
- off the air
- off the beam
- off the beaten track
- off the cuff
- off the deep end
- off the ground
- off the handle
- off the hook
- off the mark
- off the rack
- off the rails
- off the record
- off the shelf
- off the top of one's head
- off the track
- off the wagon
- off the wall
- back off
- bad off
- beat off
- beat the pants off
- beg off
- be off
- better off
- bite off more than one can chew
- bite someone's head off
- blast off
- blow off
- blow off steam
- blow the lid off
- bore to death (the pants off)
- branch off
- break off
- bring off
- browned off
- brush off
- bug off
- bump off
- burn off
- buy off
- buzz off
- call off
- cap it all (off)
- carry off
- cart off
- cast off
- change off
- charge off
- check off
- cheesed off
- chip off the old block
- choke off
- clear out (off)
- come off
- come off it
- cool down (off)
- cool off
- count off
- cry off
- cut off
- cut off one's nose
- dash off
- day off
- die off
- doze off
- drop off
- dust off
- ease off
- easy as pie (rolling off a log)
- fall away (off)
- fat of the land, live off the
- fight off
- fire off
- first off
- fish or cut bait (shit or get off)
- fly off the handle
- fob off
- fuck off
- get off
- get off on
- get off one's tail
- get off the dime
- get off the ground
- give off
- give the shirt off one's back
- go off
- go off the deep end
- goof off
- hands off
- hats off to
- haul off
- have it (off)
- head off
- high off the hog
- hit it off
- hold off
- hot off the press
- jerk off
- jumping-off place
- keep off
- kick off
- kill off
- kiss off
- knock it off
- knock off
- knock someone's block off
- knock the socks off
- laugh off
- lay off
- lead off
- leave off
- let off
- level off
- lift off
- like a chicken with its head cut off
- like water off a duck's back
- load off one's mind
- log in (off)
- make off
- mouth off
- nod off
- no skin off one's nose
- on (off) camera
- on (off) duty
- on the (off) chance
- pack off
- pair off
- palm off
- pants off
- pass off
- pay off
- peel off
- pick off
- piss off
- play off
- polish off
- pull off
- push off
- put off
- put someone off
- quick off the mark
- rake off
- rattle off
- right away (off)
- rip off
- round off
- rub off
- run away (off)
- run off
- run off at the mouth
- run off with
- rush off one's feet
- seal off
- see someone off
- sell off
- send off
- set off
- shake off
- shoot off one's mouth
- show off
- shrug off
- sign off
- slack off
- slip out (off)
- sound off
- spin off
- split one's sides (laugh one's head off)
- sponge on (off)
- square off
- squeeze off
- stand off
- stave off
- stop off
- straight off
- swear off
- switch on (off)
- tail off
- take off
- take off after
- take the edge off
- take up where one left off
- talk someone's arm off
- taper off
- tear off
- tee off
- tell off
- tell someone where to get off
- throw off
- trade off
- wipe off the map
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
Although the blood-spattered offices will be off-limits, staff have vowed to continue producing the magazine.
A passing off-duty school safety officer named Fred Lucas said that he had been told the man was a drug dealer.
The NOPD fired Knight in 1973 for stealing lumber from a construction site as an off-duty cop.
The off-year special election into which Duke threw himself drew little media notice at first.
Aaron Paul may play a young Han Solo in the first Star Wars spin-off.
A far-off volley rumbled over the plain, and a few birds stirred uneasily among the trees.
Jean was to be an architect—God knows why—but Aristide settled it, definitely, off-hand.
In favorable parts of the trail he must do better than that, to off-set losses of time where the going was most difficult.
There was something about the man that Matt liked, in spite of the deceit he had practised at the start-off of their acquaintance.
She did not take the broad, beaten road which led to the far-off plantation of Valmonde.