Example sentences of "off [prep] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | But it does lend itself to careful analysis and preparation which may well pay off during the actual bargaining . |
2 | Roberto Policano , sent off during the away leg , is suspended but Torino have hit a patch of impressive form which has consolidated their fourth place in the fiercely-competitive Italian league . |
3 | His jacket was torn off during the first verse and his shirt during the second , then the Little Sweep realized he had made a monumental error and tried to tell the two schoolmasters not to remove his trousers . |
4 | These are also concentrated in Kent with 65 per cent of the total ( 25 per cent at Faversham alone ) , and there is little change in this pattern through time except that the total quantities fall off during the seventh century . |
5 | Now is the time to make a clean sweep of all the jobs you put off during the bad weather . |
6 | Quickly they piled into the car , which sped noisily and dangerously off through the quotidian traffic . |
7 | They set off through the drizzling rain , climbing the steep path up the rock which the monks said was popularly known as Arthur 's Seat . |
8 | The cart trundled off through the greasy water . |
9 | ‘ I 'll leave you with young Hot-to-Trotsky here , then , ’ Clare says , patting Yvonne on the shoulder and winking at me as she sidles off through the cheering crowd . |
10 | We set off through the pretty woods and were soon at the base of the remarkably clean , steep granite buttress . |
11 | We watched the men bundle up their parachutes and move off through the dense undergrowth , chopping at it with jungle machetes . |
12 | Eventually we moved off through the main gate of the camp to the Vorlager , or front camp , where the showers were situated . |
13 | Then , with an uncaring smile , he strode off through the open doorway . |
14 | We set off through the lovely village of Stonethwaite and up the steep woodland path towards Great Crag . |
15 | The left wing , though still attached to the fuselage , had been almost completely sheared off between the inner engine and the fuselage and was angled back about thirty degrees from normal . |
16 | For instance , Charles Harvey has tipped her off about the new motorway but she pretends she does n't know . |
17 | Really British , I 'm pissed off about the European passports |
18 | Similar doubts were expressed about the study of the environment , which took off about the same time , but this seems to have gained a much firmer academic foothold , despite the fact that such courses range from the physical to the social with , as one CRAC Degree Course Guide put it , almost nothing in common between these two extremes . |
19 | Many years later Harry Houghton , one of the members of the Portland spy ring sentenced to 15 years ' imprisonment in 1961 , claimed that his Russian controller ( who was , incidentally , somehow tipped off about the impending arrest of the spy ring and never caught ) , told him during a meeting at the Crown Inn , at Punknoll in Dorset ( not far from the underwater research laboratory where Houghton worked ) , that the Russians had been warned of Crabb 's plan . |
20 | It was rather a coincidence that she was wearing a dark blue guernsey exactly like Laura 's , with a neck which necessitated the same blindfold struggle to get it off About the whole incident Richard felt no dissatisfaction and certainly no regret . |
21 | Her voice trailed off as the two pairs of eyes fixed on her and her head drooped as she said , ‘ That was a silly thing to say . |
22 | Mr Nicholas Bragge , for the French producers , claimed that the elderflower drink had been ‘ dressed up ’ in a champagne bottle with the familiar wire top and was being passed off as the real stuff . |
23 | for the sake of the museums otherwise they would be t probably passed off as the real thing . |
24 | You could pass that off as the real thing . |
25 | The noise in the kitchen switched off as the small second she stood there half-naked seemed to lengthen into years . |
26 | Where there does exist a genuine public expression of concern about the way the police operate this can not just be dismissed as a matter of misunderstanding or be written off as the foolish ramblings of that police ‘ folk devil ’ the ‘ loony left ’ , who would dismantle the system for their own political ends . |
27 | The power produced drops off as the harmonic number increases , so to generate the higher harmonics requires much higher input intensity . |
28 | We could have passed you off as the English rose of our collection , although I trust you have n't the natural frigidity of your British sisters . ’ |
29 | And he was still worrying about how to pass himself off as the long-dead Bard when police nicked him dithering outside a bank . |
30 | In a game against Aberdeen , he was sent off for the 13th time in his career for fouling John McMaster , and the Pittodrie player was taken to hospital with neck injuries . |