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go off
verb
- adverb (of power, a water supply, etc) to cease to be available, running, or functioning
the lights suddenly went off
- adverb to be discharged or activated; explode
- adverb to occur as specified
the meeting went off well
- to leave (a place)
the actors went off stage
- adverb (of a sensation) to gradually cease to be felt or perceived
- adverb to fall asleep
- adverb to enter a specified state or condition
she went off into hysterics
- adverbfoll bywith to abscond (with)
- adverb (of concrete, mortar, etc) to harden
- informal.adverb (of food, milk, etc) to become stale or rotten
- informal.preposition to cease to like
she went off him after their marriage
- informal.adverb to become bad-tempered
- slang.adverb to have an orgasm
- slang.adverb (of premises) to be raided by the police
- slang.adverb (of a racehorse) to win a fixed race
- slang.adverb to be stolen
Example Sentences
And some of his most destructive work, like accelerating the Iranian nuclear program by pulling out of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action in 2018, or imposing economic sanctions on Venezuela so severe that they catalyzed a mass migration to the United States that he was able to blame on Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, were the equivalent of planting bombs that go off long after you’ve left the room.
“I hope your beeper doesn’t go off,” Ryan Girdusky said after Hasan called himself a supporter of the Palestinian people.
"It's like we have some hand grenades in the back of a jeep and sometimes they go off when there's a lot of pressure."
But in her interviews, she often appeared uncomfortable and unwilling to go off message, famously saying in a friendly interview on “The View” that she could not think of anything she would have done differently than Biden.
I’m a pop musician, and I’m not wanting to go off into a major discussion on all these things at this moment.
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