Example sentences of "[verb] off on the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Driving off on the first day was Sandy Lyle … as a winner of the British Open and American Masters he 's got to be one of the best judges of courses around
2 It came off on the playing field and so there was no way I could find the little screw .
3 They would expect to learn of the success of the Tay landings , and to set off on the seven miles that would take them to the central strongholds of Alba , already besieged by their fellows .
4 I think we got off on the right foot . ’
5 PS Sorry you got off on the wrong foot with the new commander .
6 My respectful view , for reasons which your Lordships will have noted , is that both the contention of the defence and the court 's refutation of it were misconceived : the absence of consent on the part of the owner is already inherent in the word ‘ appropriates , ’ properly understood , and therefore the argument for the defence got off on the wrong foot and the counter-argument that the words specified by the defence can not be read into section 1(1) did not assist the prosecution .
7 Dyson got off on the wrong foot with Morris from the very beginning , even though Morris politely stopped writing while Bob introduced them , and sat back in his chair to look at Dyson .
8 ‘ I got off on the wrong foot , and I 'm never going to get it right now .
9 That 's what I did — got off on the wrong foot .
10 Montgomerie got off on the wrong foot by commencing with a trio of bogeys , making mistakes throughout the bag before settling down to birdie the fifth and sixth and reach the turn in 38 .
11 The servant , a white-coated padder trained for the infrequent appearance of people like us , goes off on the long march to the kitchens .
12 Small wonder , then , that a lot of resentment and guilt rub off on the social worker himself or herself ; and that , when opportunity arises for public shouts of , " No better than we are ! " , it may be seized upon with a fine disregard for logic in expiation of sins which might be regarded in others as excusable .
13 ‘ I 've just got off on the wrong foot with Harcourt .
14 The strike was called off on the following day .
15 Many of the farmer 's wives came in for a mug of tea and perhaps a piece of cake before they set off on the long drive for home .
16 But that alone did n't daunt my spirit , so I set off on the second day with a little more trepidation but just as much determination to learn to sail .
17 MOUNTAIN adventurer Rebecca Stephens was yesterday thought to have set off on the final stage of a climb which will make her the first British women to reach the top of Everest .
18 Especially when you 're starting off on the right foot like you and Marilyn .
19 Many women , through no fault of their own , appear to start off on the wrong foot .
20 ‘ No , I 'd expected it ; he would n't want to start off on the wrong foot . ’
21 Here at Club M'Diq you can either do your own thing or involve yourself in the daily and evening activities and events available for free ; you can lazy on the spacious sandy beach , or go off on the optional excursions to see something of what this colourful Moslem country has to offer .
22 We took off on the last leg for Tromsø .
23 ‘ White spent much of his life balanced on the boundary between crankiness and brilliance , ’ continues Girouard ; ‘ in the end he fell off on the wrong side , and a large proportion of his last years were wasted in trying to prove that Shakespeare was Bacon .
24 As he rounded the leeward mark for the first time , Pat Marshall in 9th place found himself being covered by Simon Allen and so went off on the opposite tack to get clear of the dirty wind , followed by Chris Eyre .
25 You had to meet these people , Wilcock would explain , and thus they went off on the 31 bus to meet the Trinidadian .
26 This left Briton Derek Warwick , in a Footwork , in seventh place after he had spun off on the final lap in the rain .
27 Moodie , suffering a bout of flu , kept up the momentum but eased off on the last lap with a minor suspension problem .
28 We must get off on the right foot . ’
29 It finally eases off on the very top of Rudland Rigg , a majestic shoulder of land running north to south , with views right across the moors .
30 We smoke a bit of skag , feel better and nod off on the tweedy settee before the heater .
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