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- Drifting off Eastlake 7-23-2025 | Ohio Game Fishing
Drifting off Eastlake 7-23-2025 Jump to Latest 691 views 3 replies 3 participants last post by chuckle 7d ago Narcman Discussion starter
- duck-off - WordReference Forums
Hi seeeker, duck-off is a humorous use of the suffix -off See this definition from the WR dictionary: -off, suffix -off is used to form nouns that name or refer to a competition or contest, esp between finalists or to break a tie:cook + -off → cookoff (= a cooking contest);runoff (= a deciding final contest)
- Fall off VS Fall down - WordReference Forums
Yes, there is a difference To fall off requires that whatever is falling was on something to begin with "The man fell of the roof": he was on the roof To fall down doesn't refer to what the subject was on; it refers either to the action of collapsing or to where the subject ended up (not where it began) "The old lady fell down": she didn't fall off anything, she was standing on the ground
- Off Vs Off to | WordReference Forums
Sentence (b) is correct, but the phrase "off to Scotland" uses be off, not off to The to is part of to Scotland This is meaning 34 of "off" in the WordReference dictionary: 34 starting on one's way; leaving [be + off] I'm off to Europe on Monday Some other examples of how "off" is used this way: After breakfast, we'll be off
- Lake Erie Fishing Reports - Ohio Game Fishing
Lake Erie Fishing ReportsErie specific discussions (gear, tackle, etc) about anything Erie!
- Back up or Back off - WordReference Forums
To me, Back off! is an instruction to mind your own business, and to back up is to drive backwards to avoid some obstacle or give another vehicle space (figuratively, and transitively, it also means to provide evidence that something you’ve said is accurate)
- A ways off - WordReference Forums
Hi Will you please tell me what does the phrase "A ways off" mean and why the indefinite article is used with plural noun in the context bellow A ways off, in the kitchen window of my house, you could see my mom’s outline standing at the sink, one elbow raised up and poked out sideways
- I am off to work - WordReference Forums
"I am off to work now" Does it mean that I am about to work now Thanks
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