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  1. Dictionary
    take off

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to remove something, especially clothes: He took off his clothes and got into the shower. After the poisoning scare, the product was taken off the shelves /the market (= removed from sale). Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to take something somewhere. take Are you allowed to take your phone to school?

  3. Define take off. take off synonyms, take off pronunciation, take off translation, English dictionary definition of take off. v. took , tak·en , tak·ing , takes v. tr. 1. To get into one's hands, control, or possession, especially: a. To grasp or grip: take your partner's hand.

  4. a piece of acting or writing, etc. that copies the way a particular person speaks or behaves, or the way something is done, usually to entertain other people: It was the best takeoff of the mayor that I have ever seen. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  5. 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.

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

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

  8. 1. variable noun A2. Takeoff is the beginning of a flight, when an aircraft leaves the ground. The aircraft crashed in a reservoir after takeoff. The commuter plane was waiting for takeoff. Synonyms: departure, launch, liftoff More Synonyms of takeoff. 2. countable noun [usually singular]

  9. Takeoff definition: a taking or setting off; the leaving of the ground, as in leaping or in beginning a flight in an airplane.. See examples of TAKEOFF used in a sentence.

  10. take off meaning, definition, what is take off: to remove a piece of clothing: Learn more.

  11. 1. the leaving of the ground, as in beginning an airplane flight. 2. a departure from a starting point, as in beginning a race. 3. the place or point at which a person or thing takes off. 4. a humorous imitation; parody; send-up. [1820–30]