off
71off — Mai (from); ē (away). ♦ To fall off a box, hā ule mai ka pahu. ♦ Be off! Hele i kahi ē! Hele pēlā! Hemū! ♦ Off balance, kūlike ole …
72off — or offstage (or off camera) refers to action or dialogue off the visible stage, or beyond the boundaries of the camera s field of vision or depicted frame; aka off screen …
73off — (Adj.) [off] 1. offen (...geh rei, s Türl is off.) 2. geöffnet (...hod da Wirt heid off?) …
74off — [OE] Off originated simply as the adverbial use of of. The spelling off, denoting the extra emphasis given to the adverb, began to appear in the 15th century, but the orthographic distinction between off for the adverb, and for prepositional uses …
75off-go — ˈ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷ noun Etymology: off (III) + go (after go off) : a going or starting off : start …
76off of — preposition Date: 1567 off Usage: The of is often criticized as superfluous, a comment that is irrelevant because off of is an idiom. It is much more common in speech than in edited writing and is more common in American English than in British …
77off'uh — Gullah Words off, off of …
78off'um — Gullah Words off, or off of him, her, it, them …
79off, of — is redundant. Write Get off the table, not Get off of the table …
80off — adv 1. away, out, aside, at a distance, distantly. prep 2. from, away from, out of, out. adj 3. wrong, incorrect, inaccurate, mistaken, in error; misguided, misled; barking up the wrong tree, off base. 4. abnormal, Sl. dotty, Inf. nutty, Sl.… …