Example sentences of "off [prep] a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 And the occasion will be given more spice by the fact that Dorahy played at full back and stand off during a spell at the Boulevard .
2 MARILLION singer Steve Hogarth was left red-faced when a fan tried to rip his trousers off during a sell-out show .
3 The public impression was that seamen had become substantially worse off during a period in which real wages fell by at least 4% .
4 He cantered back and forth on the gravel beach , then rode off through a corn field .
5 It sprang down off her lap and prowled off through a flower bed .
6 This increase did not account for almost £200 million written off through a change in accounting practices .
7 After trailing her for over two hours Poppy flopped down , but when I approached her she just got up and dived off through a hole in the fence .
8 Once pasta is cooked , strain water off through a colander and , using the same pan , add two to three tablespoons of olive oil ; heat the oil and drop in one to two tablespoons of pesto .
9 He thought about the dignified posture of Elinor and Elinor 's mother , about how good they looked in black , about how they retained their composure even as the oblong box containing Derek slid off through a gap in the crematorium wall .
10 She flew around , looking for Prince William , found him in the kitchen , grabbed his arm and ran off through a side door .
11 ‘ Please , ’ she replied , but she was grateful to him that he did not hurry her but allowed her to look her fill before they set off through a pathway of more trees and green parkland .
12 Sailing as corporate hospitality took off about a decade ago , with companies looking for a new way of hosting events .
13 He was pissed off about a cameraman who kept stalking his every move ; filming for use on the large video screens positioned on either side of the stage .
14 Part of the cathedral had been roped off as a theatre , a very Sussex touch .
15 It might be interesting ; he was obviously intelligent and well-educated , and the fact that both Dora and Iris had written him off as a fortune-hunter caused her no particular misgivings .
16 It started off as a laugh , but has become a job to me .
17 With sterling out of Europe 's exchange-rate mechanism , Britons tend to write this off as a pipe-dream .
18 Although it started off as a school project , the spider catcher has attracted alot of outside interest .
19 Seedlings of Platypodium elegans ( Leguminosae ) also in central America die of damping off as a function of distance from the mother in their first year , when the mortality rate can be up to 81% .
20 It starts off as a satire of Pennebaker 's Dylan doc Do n't Look Back and — cut to the pace of Roberts ' twangy crap folk songs — also attacks Saturday Night Live , rock ‘ n ’ roll , right-wingers , and stupid people .
21 Started off as a flower .
22 It started off as a flower .
23 On the last day of the Centenary Test of 1980 , Arlott signed off as a commentator in a much more formal setting .
24 Dressed , Dawn could be passed off as a member of the audience .
25 He did not start off as a rebel seeking out Peripatetics to confound .
26 I do not accept either the Right-wing proposition that we need only to make the country better off as a whole without making any special effort in the inner cities . ’
27 A banker 's acceptance starts off as a bill of exchange , which is itself a form of IOU .
28 She broke off as a man 's voice called from the staircase : ‘ What 's all this dam ’ talking ?
29 She has played Mozart on stage and in her new film Orlando plays someone who starts off as a man in Elizabethan times and ends up as a woman in the present .
30 A Rhodian , Menodotus , collaborated with another Rhodian to forge a bronze statue of Apollo and pass it off as a work of the early fifth century BC .
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