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take off

phrasal verb
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take off
  1. (of an aircraft, etc.飞机等) to leave the ground and begin to fly起飞
    • The plane took off an hour late.飞机起飞晚了一个小时。
    related noun take-off opposite landTopics Spacea2, Transport by aira2
  2. (informal) to leave a place, especially in a hurry匆匆离去;急忙离开
    • When he saw me coming he took off in the opposite direction.他见我走过来便赶快转身走了。
  3. (of an idea, a product, etc.观念、产品等) to become successful or popular very quickly or suddenly突然大受欢迎;迅速流行
    • The new magazine has really taken off.这份新杂志真是大受欢迎。
    • Her singing career took off after her TV appearance.她在电视上露面后,她的歌唱事业开始腾飞。
    Topics Successc1
take somebody off
  1. to copy somebody’s voice, actions or manner in a humorous way(以诙谐的方式)模仿,学某人的样子 synonym impersonate
  2. (in sports, entertainment, etc.体育运动、娱乐等) to make somebody stop playing, acting, etc. and leave the field or the stage换下;中止;取消
    • He was taken off after twenty minutes.二十分钟后,他被替换下场。
take something off
  1. to remove something, especially a piece of clothing from your/somebody’s body脱下(衣服);摘掉
    • to take off your coat脱掉大衣
    • He took off my wet boots and made me sit by the fire.他脱掉我湿漉漉的靴子,让我在火炉旁坐下。
    opposite put something on
  2. to have a period of time as a break from work休假;休息
    • I've decided to take a few days off next week.我已决定下星期休息几天。
  3. [often passive] to stop a public service, television programme, performances of a show, etc.取消;停演
    • The show was taken off because of poor audience figures.该剧目因不卖座而停演了。
  4. to remove some of somebody’s hair, part of somebody’s body, etc.剪掉(头发);截去,切除(人体部位)
    • The hairdresser asked me how much she should take off.理发师问我头发剪多少。
    • The explosion nearly took his arm off.他的胳膊差点儿被炸掉。
take yourself/somebody off (to…)
  1. (informal) to leave a place; to make somebody leave a place(使)离去,走掉;带走
take somebody off something
  1. [often passive] to remove somebody from something such as a job, position, piece of equipment, etc.调离,解除(工作、职务等);撤掉,拆除(器械)
    • The officer leading the investigation has been taken off the case.主持调查此案的警员已被撤下。
    • After three days she was taken off the ventilator.三天之后给她摘掉了呼吸器。
take something off something
  1. to remove an amount of money or a number of marks, points, etc. in order to reduce the total扣除,减去(款额、分数等)
    • The manager took $10 off the bill.经理把账单上的金额减了 10 美元。
    • That experience took ten years off my life (= made me feel ten years older).那段经历使我老了十岁。

take-off

noun
/ˈteɪk ɒf/
/ˈteɪk ɔːf/
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  1. [uncountable, countable] the moment at which an aircraft leaves the ground and starts to fly(飞机的)起飞
    • The plane is ready for take-off.飞机准备随时起飞。
    • take-off speed起飞速度
    • Owing to the fog, there were no take-offs from the airport yesterday.由于大雾,昨天机场没有起飞。
    • (figurative) The local economy is poised for take-off.当地的经济蓄势待发。
    opposite landingTopics Spaceb2, Transport by airb2
  2. [countable, uncountable] the moment when your feet leave the ground when you jump起跳
  3. [countable] if you do a take-off of somebody, you copy the way they speak or behave, in a humorous way to entertain people(对他人言行的)滑稽模仿
take off phrasal verb
take sth off (take off your jacket) discount (take $10 off the bill) flee (They took off in the opposite direction.) set off (a plane takes off)

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