broke off

listen to the pronunciation of broke off
English - Turkish

Definition of broke off in English Turkish dictionary

break off
koparmak
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.

break off
kırılıp ayrılmak
break off
kırılmak
break off
kopar
break off
ilişiğini kesmek
break off
kopartmak
break off
(deyim) (ilişki) kesilmek
break off
(deyim) (ilişki) kopmak
break off
paydos etmek
break off
(Askeri) taarruzu kes! komutu
break off
ilişkiyi kesmek
break off
(Askeri) GÖREVİ KES EMRİ: Yakın hava desteğinde, bir taarruzu derhal kesmek üzere kullanılan bir komut
break off
(deyim) (ilişki) sona ermek
break off
(Fiili Deyim ) 1- (ilişkiyi) kesmek 2- bozmak 3- kesilmek , dinmek 4- birdenbire durmak , ara vermek
break off
(deyim) (çalışmaya) ara vermek
break off
birdenbire durmak
break off
aniden kesmek
break off
(deyim) mola vermek
break off
bitirmek
break off
kesmek

Ne yazık ki tartışmayı kesmek zorundayız. - I'm afraid we must break off the discussion.

break off
son vermek
break off
bozmak (nişan vb.)
break off
bitmek
English - English
Simple past of break off
broke off contact
ended a relationship, cut off a connection
broke off his relations
disconnected all of his ties with people, isolated himself from the world
broke off relations
ended a relationship, cut off contact
broke off the relationship
ended a relationship, cut off contact, stopped a friendly relation
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 off
cut off, stop abruptly; break off ties; break down; isolate, disconnect
break off
If someone breaks off a relationship, they end it. The two West African states had broken off relations two years ago He doesn't seem to have the courage to break it off with her
break off
If part of something breaks off or if you break it off, it comes off or is removed by force. The two wings of the aircraft broke off on impact Grace broke off a large piece of the clay They've torn down wooden fences and broken branches off trees
break off
break off (a piece from a whole); "Her tooth chipped"
break off
v Act of a group of jumpers separating from a freefall or canopy group
break off
interrupt before its natural or planned end; "We had to cut short our vacation"
break off
prevent completion; "stop the project"; "break off the negociations"
break off
– 1 RW – A predetermined altitude at which all jumpers turn 180 degrees from the center of the formation and track in order to have enough airspace to safely open their parachutes 2 CRW – The altitude after which no more incoming canopies are allowed to dock
break off
If you break off when you are doing or saying something, you suddenly stop doing it or saying it. Llewelyn broke off in mid-sentence The commander of the German task force radioed that he was breaking off the action
break off
To cease formation skydiving by tracking away from the formation prior to deployment
break off
break a piece from a whole; "break a branch from a tree"
break off
break a small piece off from; "chip the glass"; "chip a tooth"
their relations broke off
the bond between them was broken, the contact between them broke off
broke off

    Turkish pronunciation

    brōk ôf

    Pronunciation

    /ˈbrōk ˈôf/ /ˈbroʊk ˈɔːf/

    Etymology

    [ 'brAk ] (verb.) before 12th century. Middle English breken, from Old English brecan; akin to Old High German brehhan to break, Latin frangere.
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