take off the clothes
1take off — verb 1. leave (Freq. 15) The family took off for Florida • Syn: ↑depart, ↑part, ↑start, ↑start out, ↑set forth, ↑set off, ↑set out …
2The Take Off All Your Clothes EP — NOTOC Infobox Album Name = The Take Off All Your Clothes EP Type = EP Artist = Jenny Owen Youngs Released = 2007 Recorded = Genre = Indie, folk rock Length = Label = Producer = Reviews = Last album = Batten the Hatches (2005) This album = The… …
3take off — 1)(clothes) remove clothes etc. Please take off your shoes before you enter our house. 2)(time) be absent from work He was sick and had to take off a week from work. 3) depart suddenly or quickly, run away We decided to take off right after the… …
4take off — 1. to leave the ground and fly. The plane could not take off because of a problem with its fuel tanks. 2. to suddenly succeed. The style really took off among teens. 3. to leave suddenly. When he saw me coming, he took off in the other direction …
5take off — phr verb Take off is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑aircraft, ↑business, ↑career, ↑flight, ↑helicopter, ↑idea, ↑jet, ↑plane, ↑rocket Take off is used with these nouns as the object: ↑agenda, ↑ …
6Nova express off the Road: My Years with Cassady, Kerouac, and Ginsberg — by Carolyn Cassady (1990) Though Carolyn Cassady does not consider herself a Beat, this is one of the most important memoirs that was written about the Beat era. Carolyn was commissioned by a publisher to write her memoirs in 1970, but she was …
7The Bob & Tom Show — Genre comedy, talk Running time 6:00 A.M. 10:00 A.M.EST Country …
8The chocolate game — is a game often played at children s parties. Contents 1 Items needed 2 Setting up the game 3 Gameplay 4 References …
9clothes — n. 1) to change; put on; take off; wear clothes 2) to launder, wash clothes 3) night; summer; swaddling; winter clothes 4) new; old clothes 5) civilian clothes 6) in clothes (the soldier was in civilian clothes) * * * [kləʊ(ð)z] old clothes put… …
10take — I [[t]te͟ɪk[/t]] USED WITH NOUNS DESCRIBING ACTIONS ♦ takes, taking, took, taken (Take is used in combination with a wide range of nouns, where the meaning of the combination is mostly given by the noun. Many of these combinations are common… …