t-off

listen to the pronunciation of t-off
الإنجليزية - التركية

تعريف t-off في الإنجليزية التركية القاموس.

off
{s} kapalı

Gazın kapalı olup olmadığına bak. - See if the gas is turned off.

Dışarı çıkmadan önce gazın kapalı olduğundan emin olun. - Be sure to turn off the gas before you go out.

doze off
uyuklamak
nod off
{f} uyuklamak
rip off
kazık atmak
break off
koparmak
come off
kopmak
fight off
defetmek
put off
ertelemek

Toplantıyı ertelemek zorunda kaldık. - We had to put off the meeting.

Yağmur yüzünden oyunu ertelemek zorunda kaldık. - We had to put off the game due to rain.

rip off
kazıklamak
pull off
{f} koparmak
take off
{f} havalanmak

Havalanmak zorundayız. - We've got to take off.

Garip bir ses duyduğumda uçak havalanmak üzereydi. - The plane was about to take off when I heard a strange sound.

take off one's clothes
soyunmak
wear off
yıpranmak
break off
kopmak

Erkek arkadaşın sorunlu bir kişi ama bırakmak ya da kopmak için yeterince iyi bir neden değil. - Your boyfriend is a problematic person, but that's not a good enough reason to give up or break off your relationship.

off
{e} dışında

Tom kampüs dışında yaşıyor. - Tom lives off-campus.

Aradığınız telefon ya kapalı ya da kapsama alanı dışında, lütfen daha sonra tekrar deneyiniz. - The mobile phone you have dialed is either switched off or outside the coverage area, please try again later.

wear off
eskitmek
rip off
sökmek
wear off
eskimek
toff
züppe
toff
kodaman
toff
{i} kibar adam
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية

تعريف t-off في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.

-off
Forming nouns denoting competitions
-off
Alternative spelling of -ov
F off
fuck off
F off
to fuck off
Off.
Officer
Off.
Office
all bets are off
Indicates that a future event appears uncertain, especially one that before seemed more certain
back off
To lower the setting of

Could you back off the volume a bit? It's really loud.

back off
To become less aggressive, particularly when one had appeared committed to act

I was going to sue, until my legal advisors told me to back off.

back off
To move backwards away from something

I tried to back off slowly from the tiger in my path.

bad off
In unfortunate circumstances, especially having financial difficulty

Who is worse off? This poor fellow who is desperately neurotic to the point of being amnesic, and wandering in and out of fugues, as bad off as he was? Or the so-called well-adjusted, productive businessman, and so forth, who is clinically sane by the same standards?.

badly off
In unfortunate circumstances, especially having financial difficulty
badly-off
Alternative spelling of badly off
bake-off
A cooking contest, especially one where competition is head-to-head, not limited to preparing food involving baking

The winner of the Pillsbury bake-off is obviously a very good cook and is respected for it.

bar off
to barricade with bars
base off of
To base on
be off
To be away from (something.)

She's on vacation, so she'll be off the net for another week.

be off
To leave

I'm off — see you later!.

be off
To be working against a present or former addiction to (something.)

I've been off drugs for almost a month.

be off with you
go away; get out
bear off from
To stand further off from (a ship)
beat off
To waste time

I beat off at work all day; I didn't get anything done.

beat off
To masturbate, usually a man of himself
beat off
To drive something away with blows or military force. Now often used figuratively
beaten off
Past participle of beat off
beating off
Present participle of beat off
beats off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of beat off
beg off
To avoid, or cancel some event that one has previously arranged with someone

I wonder if I can beg off going to the meeting that day, since it will take me an extra 2 hours out of my way.

begged off
Simple past tense and past participle of beg off
begging off
Present participle of beg off
begs off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of beg off
best off
Superlative form of well off
best-off
Alternative spelling of best off
best-off
Superlative form of well-off
better off
Comparative form of well off: more well off

I think it would be better off in the bag.

better-off
Comparative form of well-off: more well-off
better-off
Alternative spelling of better off
bite off more than one can chew
To try to do too much; to take on or attempt more than one is capable of doing

I think I bit off more than I could chew when I agreed to paint this house by myself.

bite someone's head off
To severely berate someone
blast off
to begin ascent under rocket power
blew off steam
Simple past of blow off steam
blow off
to shirk or disregard (a duty or person)

We've both been blowing off Peter all day: he's really boring.

blow off
to pass gas; to break wind
blow off
To shoot something with a gun, causing it to come disconnected

Her leg was blown off by a landmine.

blow off
To vent, usually, to reduce pressure in a container

The radioactivity was released when they blew off steam from the containment vessel.

blow off steam
To rant or shout in order to relieve stress; to vent

Don’t take it personally when he shouts like that. He’s just blowing off steam.

blowing off steam
Present participle of blow off steam
blown off steam
Past participle of blow off steam
blows off steam
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of blow off steam
bog off
To leave, to go away
bogged off
Simple past tense and past participle of bog off
bogging off
Present participle of bog off
bogs off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bog off
boil off
to be removes by boiling

Some of the salt will rise up with the vapors, but most of it will be left in the pan when the water has boiled off.

boil off
to remove by boiling

cooking it will boil off the vodka.

bought off
Simple past tense and past participle of buy off
bounce off the walls
To be overly active relative to the enclosed space in which one is
bounced off the walls
Simple past tense and past participle of bounce off the walls
bounces off the walls
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bounce off the walls
bouncing off the walls
Present participle of bounce off the walls
bowl-off
bowl-out
break off
To end abruptly, either temporarily or permanently

Then the conversation broke off, and there was little more talking, only a noise of men going backwards and forwards, and of putting down of kegs and the hollow gurgle of good liquor being poured from breakers into the casks.

break off
To remove a piece from a whole by breaking or snapping

The bees came and found no one but the Woodman to sting, so they flew at him and broke off all their stings against the tin, without hurting the Woodman at all. And as bees cannot live when their stings are broken that was the end of the black bees, and they lay scattered thick about the Woodman, like little heaps of fine coal.

break one off
an 1800s baseball term meaning to throw a curve ball
breaking off
Present participle of break off
breaks off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of break off
bring off
To rescue; to liberate

I'll be ta'en too, Or bring him off.

bring off
To bring away from; to bring by boat from a ship, a wreck, the shore, etc
bring off
To prove; to demonstrate; to show clearly
bring off
To succeed in doing something considered to be very difficult

I don't know how, but he managed to bring off the Acme Foods deal.

bringing off
Present participle of bring off
brings off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bring off
broke off
Simple past of break off
brought off
Simple past tense and past participle of bring off
browned off
Annoyed, upset, angry, bored, fed up, disgusted

Bob was browned off when he was passed over for promotion.

brush off
To remove something with a brush
brush off
Alternative spelling of brush-off
brush off
To disregard (something), to dismiss or ignore (someone), as unimportant
brush-off
An abrupt rebuff, a snub or curt rejection, a disdainful dismissal
buck off
To cause to fall off

The cowboy was bucked off the bronco after 7 seconds.

bucked off
Simple past tense and past participle of buck off
bucking off
Present participle of buck off
bucks off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of buck off
bug off
To go away

I lied to him to appease him so he would bug off.

bug off
Used to tell somebody to leave them alone
bugger off
Go away
bugger off
An expression of disagreement or disbelief

Bugger off! You are joking, aren't you?.

bugger off
To leave, go away, disappear

We tried to catch him, but he had already buggered off.

buggering off
Present participle of bugger off
buggers off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bugger off
bump off
To cut class; to play truant
bump off
To kill, especially to murder

In Match Point, when a mistress is about to blab to a wife, threatening a man's comfortable life, his solution is to bump off the girlfriend.

bunk off
To play truant
burn off
To dispose of unusable explosive natural gas from an oil well by burning it as it emerges from the well
burn off
To fill low value air time with programming not suitable for its original purpose
burn off
To cause to dissipate by applying heat
burn off
To dissipate as the result of heat
buy off
to pay off, convince to refrain etc. by corrupt payment or other service
buying off
Present participle of buy off
buys off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of buy off
buzz off
To leave with a buzzing sound

The bee was flying around my head, but then it buzzed off.

buzz off
To leave (especially busily), take off, go away
buzz off
Used to tell someone to go away

I'm trying to read in peace, buzz off will you?.

call off
To recall; to cancel or call a halt to

The police called off the search for the missing boy.

call off the dogs
To ease up on after inflicting great punishment
call off the dogs
During a one-sided sports contest, to remove the first-string unit of a team from the game after dominating the opponent

Doing the opponents an obvious favor, the football coach decided to call off the dogs early after his team was up 56-0.

called off
Simple past tense and past participle of call off
calling off
Present participle of call off
calls off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of call off
cap it all off
To surpass or outdo something
cap off
To finish
cap off
To glue a relatively uncomplicated compact manifold to a manifold of the same dimension along (a component of the latter's boundary)

Cap off, with discs just above the annulus, any circuits that bound in the annulus; then use annuli to cap off adjacent pairs of curves that encircle the annulus in opposite directions.

capped off
Simple past tense and past participle of cap off
capping off
Present participle of cap off
caps off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cap off
carry off
To transport away

Bandits carried off most of the money.

carry off
To act convincingly; to succeed at giving the impression of (e.g.) knowledge, confidence, or familiarity

The actress carried off a difficult performance.

cast off
To finish the last row of knitted stitches and remove them securely from the needle
cast off
To let go (a cable or rope securing a vessel to a buoy, wharf etc) so that the vessel may proceed
cast off
To discard or reject something
casted off
Simple past tense and past participle of cast off
casting off
Present participle of cast off
casts off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cast off
charge-off
Alternative spelling of charge off
cheese off
To annoy

Sony management . . . is 'fixing' one part of the triangle at the cost of the other two. This cheeses off software makers more than you can imagine, and it also cheeses off customers.

cheesed off
Annoyed, upset, angry

I'm really cheesed off about the lack of hand dryers in this washroom!.

cheesed off
Simple past tense and past participle of cheese off
cheeses off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cheese off
cheesing off
Present participle of cheese off
chip off the old block
Someone who takes after their parent

He’s a chip off the old block for following in his father’s footsteps.

claw off
to beat to windward to avoid being driven on th a lee shore
clear off
To leave abruptly
clock off
to end work

Most of the staff has already clocked off for the night, you should do the same.

close off
To seal or block the entrance to a road, an area, or a building so that people cannot enter

The police closed off the street while they investigated the murder scene.

come off
To have some success, to succeed

He tried his Chaplin impression, but it didn't really come off.

come off
To appear; to seem; to project a certain quality

You should be careful about how you come off during interviews.

come off
To come away (from a place); to leave
come off
To become detached

One of the wagon wheels came off.

come off
To have an orgasm

Don't people often come off together?’ she asked with naive curiosity.

come off it
An expression of disbelief

Come off it, you can't be serious.

commercial off-the-shelf
Systems which are manufactured commercially, and then tailored for specific uses
cook off
To cause an accidental detonation of explosives, especially due to excess heat
cook off
As with above, except to unintentionally wait so long that the grenade detonates
cook off
To accidentally detonate, especially as the result of excess heat
cook off
To pull the pin from a grenade and wait two or three seconds before throwing
cook-off
Accidental detonation of explosives, especially as the result of excessive heat
cook-off
A cooking contest
cool off
To cause to decrease in temperature, activity or temper

At first he was very angry, but his friends managed to cool him off.

cool off
To decrease in temperature, activity, or temper

The metal will take about 3 hours to cool off after the molding.

cooling-off period
A length of time in which the two sides to a purchase agreement, or contract can think things over and cancel with no penalty. This period is often stipulated by national law. In the UK it is currently (2008) 14 days. In many countries it is 10 days
cop off
(followed by with) To successfully engage the company of someone, usually of the opposite sex, for a period of time

Who was that bird you copped off with at the pub last night?.

cordon off
To protect from intrusion by enclosing in a rope barrier
cordoned off
Simple past tense and past participle of cordon off
cordoning off
Present participle of cordon off
cordons off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cordon off
cried off
Simple past tense and past participle of cry off
cross off
To finish; to mark something as complete

I can cross off another project from the list.

cry off
To cancel something that one has previously arranged with someone

Sorry, but I have to cry off the game on Saturday, as my mother-in-law is coming to visit.

crying off
Present participle of cry off
cut off
To end abruptly

My phone call was cut off before I could get the information.

cut off
fuse

A thermal cut-off.

cut off
To remove via cutting
cut off
To swerve in front of (another car)
cut off
To interrupt (someone speaking)

That dingbat cut me off as I was about to conclude my theses.

cut off
To isolate or remove from contact
cut off one's nose to spite one's face
To harm oneself as a result of attempting to harm an adversary
cut-off
Alternative spelling of cutoff
cut-off
Having had shirt sleeves or pantlegs shortened by cutting material from the end
cuts off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cut off
cutting off
Present participle of cut off
cutting off one's nose to spite one's face
Present participle of cut off one's nose to spite one's face
damp off
To decay and perish through excessive moisture - mostly said of plants
dance-off
An informal competition between two dancers who must progressively dance better than their opponent
dash off
To write quickly or informally

Let me dash off a quick note.

dash off
To leave a place quickly or briefly

I have to dash off to the store, but I'll be back soon.

day off
a day of vacation; a day when one does not attend work, school etc

Tuesday is my day off.

days off
plural form of day off
do off
To take off (clothing)

So she laughed, and did off her other raiment, and slid swiftly into the water, that embraced her body in all its fresh kindness .

doze off
To fall asleep unintentionally
drift off
To fall asleep

He went to sleep, lying there under a wing of his plane, and presently Bland himself drifted off into dreams.

drift off
to lose concentration
drink off
To drink the entirety of in a short period; originally and especially, in a single gulp

She was older than any two of them combined and looked as if she could drink off a case with one hand and arm-wrestle all three of them with the other.

drive off
Alternative spelling of drive-off
drive off
To force to leave or go away
drive-off
A contest or comparison of cars or drivers
drive-off
A place where one can conveniently pull off the road
drive-off
The act of leaving a gas station with the hose nozzle still inserted into the gas-tank fill spout
drive-off
The act of leaving a gas station without paying after filling the tank
drop off
To lessen or reduce

Sales have dropped off in recent months.

drop off
To fall asleep

And when the Boy dropped off to sleep, the Rabbit would snuggle down close under his little warm chin and dream, with the Boy's hands clasped close round him all night long.

drop off
To deliver; to deposit or leave

I'll drop off your books when I see you tonight.

drop off
To fall

The leaves were slowly dropping off the tree.

drop off the radar
To vanish or fall into obscurity

Greenbaum didn't dramatically drop off the radar as soon as that song peaked, but kept slogging away for five years with diminishing returns.

drop the kids off at the pool
To defecate
drop-off
A sudden downward slope
dropped off
Simple past tense and past participle of drop off
dropping off
Present participle of drop off
drops off
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of drop off
dust off
To use something after a long time without it

I think it's time to dust off my old golf clubs, now that I'm retired.

dust off
To remove dust from something
dusted off
Simple past tense and past participle of dust off
dusting off
Present participle of dust off
easy as falling off a log
Very easy

For me, making a meal out of leftovers is as easy as falling off a log.

eff off
A censored form of the phrase fuck off
face off
To confront someone
face off
The starting point, in a match of ice hockey. Two players face each other, for snatching the puck
face off
Either an actual or a figurative face to face confrontation, especially a bitter one
face-off
The start of play, when two players try to get control of the puck dropped by the referee
face-off
A confrontation or argument between two people or groups

It's unclear which side will win the latest face-off between the President and Congress.

fair off
To clear

They said it was going to fair off later on, but it didn't.

fall off
A hip hop term; to completely lose the plot in terms of artistic direction

MC ___'s new album is wack - he's fallen off big-time.

fall off
To become detached or to drop from

A button fell off my coat.

fall off
To diminish in size or value

Business always falls off in the winter.

fall off a truck
Of an item of merchandise, to come into a person's possession without having been paid for; to be acquired illegally

He said he bought it at the markets but I think it fell off a truck.

fall off the back of a lorry
Of an item of merchandise, to come into a perons's possession without having been paid for; to have been acquired illegally
fall off the turnip truck
To be naive, uninformed, or unsophisticated, in the manner of a rustic person

Doesn't it strike you as funny that this city, which prides itself on its erudition and sophistication, can oftimes get suckered like a bumpkin who just fell off the turnip truck?.

fall off the wagon
To cease or fail at a regimen of self-improvement or reform; to lapse back into an old habit or addiction

Though he fell off the wagon several times, he eventually succeeded in quitting.

fall-off analysis
A type of archaeological analysis. Finds are plotted on a map and contoured in relation to the amount of finds
fallen off
Past participle of fall off
falling off
Present participle of fall off
t-off

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