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"Dust off" is a colloquial phrase that means to shake off dust or dirt from something, or to revive or bring something back into use after a period of inactivity or neglect. It can also refer to the act of preparing or cleaning something for use.
In Polish, you'd have to say something like: Chodźmy do kina!
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."
The phrase "knock it off" meaning to tell someone to stop doing something originated from an auction setting. Traditionally, "knock it off" is a request that is given to an auctioneer to end the bidding. This refers to the auctioneer "knocking his gavel," a sign to close bidding.
scrub it off or go to a specialist or scraped it off with something.
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
"Dashed off" means to write or compose something quickly, often without much thought or effort. It can also refer to completing a task hastily or in a hurried manner.
It means to live off of what you have. Like if you have a farm, you would live off of what you grew.
if something 'knocked my socks off', it astonished me. that's the only phrase i recall. later :)
Nail polish remover might work. If it doesn't work then it'll come off on your own.
Poop help nail polish get off.