Take off is a phrasal verb and has idiomatic meanings and literal meanings Mitch wants to take off for parts unknown. -- means to leave to go some where -- idiomatic meaning Carol wants to take off her shoes to relieve her sore feet. -- means to remove something -- literal meaning The plan will take off soon. -- idiomatic meaning -- means to go into the sky
The image is of you "taking a load off" of your feet, which are holding you up. If you take a load off your feet, you'd sit down. This is most commonly used as an invitation to sit, as in "Come on in, take a load off."
it means shoes or take it off
it means that you have to take it to the vet
A means Attack V means Vertical Take-off and Landing
To take away or take off (Remove your shoes) or delete (Remove that word from your sentence)
"Doff" is the ellided form of "do off" or "take off". It is the opposite of "don" which is the ellided form of "do on" and means "put on" as in "Don we now our gay apparel" which means "Let us now put on the clothes which look gay."
Its called weening
It means take the lid off the top of the cookpot.
This is the point at which steady growth begins.
Take off would normally refer to either a mode of transport or an item that is covering (something). Take out often means to take something out of something of a larger surface area. For example taking a pin out of a box. And "Prepare for take off!"
There are different usages for the phrase "take off." In the non-idiomatic sense, as in "take off your hat, or "take a little off the top," "take" means to manipulate, to control. In the idiom "take (oneself) off " meaning to depart hastily, or of an airplane, to begin flight, it has no separate meaning - that is why idioms cannot be "figured out" simply by understanding the words in them.