You would use the phrase Went off when talking about perishables that have gone bad or past their use by date
it means f******ck off of that
Yes, "before we went out" is a phrase. In linguistic terms, a phrase is a group of words that functions as a single unit in the syntax of a sentence. In this case, "before we went out" acts as a prepositional phrase, providing information about the timing or sequence of events.
It seems that suddenly in the past few years everyone under a certain age is using the phrase "based off". I can only guess that some character on a popular TV show used this phrase a lot. There is actually NO such word-phrase in the English language. "Based off" is, in fact, meaningless. Something can NOT be "based" and "off" at the same time. I believe the meaning you kids are attempting to get across is actually the meaning conveyed by the accepted English word-phrase, "based on", meaning "started from or founded on."
going together. (politics and honesty cannot go hand in hand}
It means to live off of what you have. Like if you have a farm, you would live off of what you grew.
No its not the vulgar phase .The meaning is to make someone very anger
"Of late" is the correct phrase, meaning recently or in the recent past. "Off late" is not a standard English expression.
The phrase 'went baff fishing' has four syllables.
"Flap off" is not a common phrase or term in English. It could potentially be interpreted as a whimsical or playful expression with no specific meaning.
There is a difference between laid off or layed off. In relation to being dismissed from work, the correct phrase to use is laid off. Layed off actually has no grammatical meaning.
the meaning of the phrase myriad manifestation is-countless evidence
If you mean a light bulb, it means someone got an idea or they finally understand an idea. "The light bulb went off in his head" But it really should be that it went "on" not "off". The "off" comes from the way a light of a flash camera comes on and off.