kicked off

listen to the pronunciation of kicked off
English - English
Simple past tense and past participle of kick off
kick off
To die or quit permanently

It's a wonder that old dog hasn't kicked off yet.

kick off
To force the weaning of a bovine cow's calf by restricting the calf's access to its mother's udders. Used figuratively or literally

A week after we kicked off her calf that cow was still bawling.

kick off
To be overcome with anger, to start an argument or a fight

When she called him a drunk, it was the last straw. He just kicked off.

kick off
To make the first kick in a game or part of a game

The players kick off for the third quarter and the clock starts.

kick off
To shut down or turn off suddenly

The washer was working fine until it kicked off in the middle of a cycle.

kick off
To start; to launch

Let's kick off this project with a planning meeting.

kick off
In football, when the players kick off, they start a game by kicking the ball from the centre of the pitch. Liverpool kicked off an hour ago
kick off
If you kick off your shoes, you shake your feet so that your shoes come off. She stretched out on the sofa and kicked off her shoes
kick off
Smooth, effective ball delivery
kick off
To deviate a wellbore from the vertical
kick off
To kick someone off an area of land means to force them to leave it. We can't kick them off the island
kick off
opening kick in a football game; beginning action, promotion
kick off
If an event, game, series, or discussion kicks off, or is kicked off, it begins. The shows kick off on October 24th The Mayor kicked off the party We kicked off with a slap-up dinner
kick off
commence officially
kicked off
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