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    take off

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. TAKE SOMETHING OFF definition: 1. to remove something, especially clothes: 2. to spend time away from your work: 3. If an…. Learn more.

  3. take something off something. to remove an amount of money or a number of marks, points, etc. in order to reduce the total. The manager took $10 off the bill. That experience took ten years off my life (= made me feel ten years older).

  4. The meaning of TAKEOFF is a rise or leap from a surface in making a jump or flight or an ascent in an aircraft or in the launching of a rocket. How to use takeoff in a sentence.

  5. If you take off or take yourself off, you go away, often suddenly and unexpectedly.

  6. TAKE OFF definition: 1. If an aircraft takes off, it begins to fly. 2. to suddenly become successful: 3. to suddenly…. Learn more.

  7. (of an idea, a product, etc.) to become successful or popular very quickly or suddenly The new magazine has really taken off. Her singing career took off after her TV appearance.

  8. Take off = to become popular or successful. (intransitive – informal) This phrasal verb is used when a person’s success or rise in popularity is sudden or very quick. It can also refer to when a (new) product has quickly had a lot of sales, especially compared to normal. That new song by Samantha Star has really taken off in the charts.

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