Example sentences of "[verb] [noun pl] [v-ing] off " in BNC.

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1 Some of them have got arms going off all over the place .
2 You find bombs going off !
3 ‘ Practically the only good thing which can be said about the patronage system , ’ said the Archdeacon , ‘ is that it prevents dioceses selling off or pulling down at least some few of their beautiful buildings . ’
4 When there was a sense of unrest and what not , and then first one ship then the other , starts shuddering but before that happened we saw Germans coming off in the rafts and that .
5 It would be unfair to the House to spend hours reeling off reams of statistics but , so that the picture of Shrewsbury is fully painted , I must tell the House that in 1983 there were 1,334 long-term unemployed people .
6 Mr Taffy Thomas , one of Britain 's few professional story-tellers , will show 30 trainee clergy at St John 's College , Durham , how to stop parishioners nodding off .
7 A lectern should have a minimum depth of 38cm and a minimum width of 5Ocm — space to hold two A4 sheets alongside each other — and a ‘ lip ’ of at least 1.5cm to stop papers sliding off onto the floor .
8 But the most striking anomaly of Labour 's plans is the way it treats millionaires living off unearned income .
9 A concern to prevent viewers switching off is normal but , on this particular occasion , broadcasters — particularly those at the BBC — appear to be overdoing it by promising a mixture of melodrama and cabaret ( ‘ a great national party ’ is another of Dimbleby 's images ) .
10 A plastic tumbler containing toothbrush and paste stood on a deeper shelf behind two thin metal rails designed to prevent things falling off .
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