go off en el diccionario francés Oxford-Hachette

Traducciones de go off en el diccionario inglés»francés

I.go off V. [ingl. brit. ɡəʊ -, ingl. am. ɡoʊ -] (go off)

II.go off V. [ingl. brit. ɡəʊ -, ingl. am. ɡoʊ -] (go off [sb/sth]) ingl. brit.

I.go off with V. [ingl. brit. ɡəʊ -, ingl. am. ɡoʊ -] (go off with [sb/sth])

Traducciones de go off en el diccionario inglés»francés

1. go (move, travel):

aller (from de, to à, en)
who goes there? MILIT.

2. go (on specific errand, activity):

18. go (extend in depth or scope):

II.go [ingl. brit. ɡəʊ, ingl. am. ɡoʊ] V. trans. see usage note

III.go <pl goes> [ingl. brit. ɡəʊ, ingl. am. ɡoʊ] SUST.

1. go ingl. brit.:

à qui le tour?

IV.go [ingl. brit. ɡəʊ, ingl. am. ɡoʊ] ADJ.

he's all go coloq.!
it's all the go coloq.!
that was a near go coloq.!
to go off on one ingl. brit. coloq.
to go off like a frog in a sock ingl. austr. coloq. event:
s'éclater coloq.
there you go coloq.!
don't go there argot

Véase también: public, private, keep

I.public [ingl. brit. ˈpʌblɪk, ingl. am. ˈpəblɪk] SUST.

II.public [ingl. brit. ˈpʌblɪk, ingl. am. ˈpəblɪk] ADJ.

public/-ique

I.private [ingl. brit. ˈprʌɪvət, ingl. am. ˈpraɪvɪt] SUST.

III.private [ingl. brit. ˈprʌɪvət, ingl. am. ˈpraɪvɪt] ADJ.

V.private [ingl. brit. ˈprʌɪvət, ingl. am. ˈpraɪvɪt]

I.keep [ingl. brit. kiːp, ingl. am. kip] SUST.

II.keep <pret. imperf., part. pas. kept> [ingl. brit. kiːp, ingl. am. kip] V. trans.

1. keep (cause to remain):

III.keep <pret. imperf., part. pas. kept> [ingl. brit. kiːp, ingl. am. kip] V. intr.

I.off [ingl. brit. ɒf, ingl. am. ɔf, ɑf] SUST. coloq. (start) Off is often found as the second element in verb combinations (fall off, run off etc.) and in offensive interjections (clear off etc.). For translations consult the appropriate verb entry (fall off, run off, clear off etc.).
off is used in certain expressions such as off limits, off piste etc. and translations for these will be found under the noun entry (limit, piste etc.).
For other uses of off see the entry below.

II.off [ingl. brit. ɒf, ingl. am. ɔf, ɑf] ADV.

III.off [ingl. brit. ɒf, ingl. am. ɔf, ɑf] ADJ.

V.off [ingl. brit. ɒf, ingl. am. ɔf, ɑf] PREP.

VI.off [ingl. brit. ɒf, ingl. am. ɔf, ɑf] INTERJ.

Véase también: well off, street, run off, piste, on, limit, fall off, clear off, better off

I.well off [ingl. brit. wɛlˈɒf] SUST. + v. pl.

II.well off [ingl. brit. wɛlˈɒf] ADJ.

I.street [ingl. brit. striːt, ingl. am. strit] SUST.

rue f
across or over ingl. brit. the street

II.street [ingl. brit. striːt, ingl. am. strit] ADJ.

II.run off V. [ingl. brit. rʌn -, ingl. am. rən -] (run off [sth], run [sth] off)

piste [ingl. brit. piːst, ingl. am. pist] SUST.

I.on [ingl. brit. ɒn, ingl. am. ɑn, ɔn] PREP. When on is used as a straightforward preposition expressing position (on the beach, on the table) it is generally translated by sur: sur la plage, sur la table; on it is translated by dessus: there's a table over there, put the key on it = il y a une table là-bas, mets la clé dessus.
on is often used in verb combinations in English (depend on, rely on, cotton on etc.). For translations, consult the appropriate verb entry (depend, rely, cotton on etc.).
If you have doubts about how to translate a phrase or expression beginning with on (on demand, on impulse, on top etc.) consult the appropriate noun or other entry (demand, impulse, top etc.).
This dictionary contains usage notes on such topics as dates, islands, rivers etc. Many of these use the preposition on. For the index to these notes .
For examples of the above and further uses of on, see the entry below.

1. on (position):

II.on [ingl. brit. ɒn, ingl. am. ɑn, ɔn] ADJ.

III.on [ingl. brit. ɒn, ingl. am. ɑn, ɔn] ADV.

IV.on [ingl. brit. ɒn, ingl. am. ɑn, ɔn] on and off, a. off and on ADV.

VI.on [ingl. brit. ɒn, ingl. am. ɑn, ɔn]

I.limit [ingl. brit. ˈlɪmɪt, ingl. am. ˈlɪmɪt] SUST.

II.limit [ingl. brit. ˈlɪmɪt, ingl. am. ˈlɪmɪt] V. trans. (restrict)

III.limit [ingl. brit. ˈlɪmɪt, ingl. am. ˈlɪmɪt] V. v. refl.

I.clear off V. [ingl. brit. klɪə -, ingl. am. ˈklɪr -] (clear off) coloq. ingl. brit.

II.clear off V. [ingl. brit. klɪə -, ingl. am. ˈklɪr -] (clear off [sth]) ingl. am.

I.better off [ingl. brit. ˌbɛtər ˈɒf] SUST.

II.better off [ingl. brit. ˌbɛtər ˈɒf] ADJ.

go off en el diccionario PONS

Traducciones de go off en el diccionario inglés»francés

Traducciones de go off en el diccionario inglés»francés

III.go <-es> [gəʊ, ingl. am. goʊ] SUST.

III.off [ɒf, ingl. am. ɑ:f] ADJ. inv.

IV.off [ɒf, ingl. am. ɑ:f] SUST. no pl. ingl. brit.

V.off [ɒf, ingl. am. ɑ:f] V. trans. ingl. am. coloq. (kill)

inglés americano

Ejemplos monolingües (no verificados por la redacción de PONS)

inglés
The second movie of the franchise is where things started to go off the rails.
www.usatoday.com
In addition, there were house alarms primed to go off if he left, and he wore a monitored electronic bracelet at all times.
www.stuff.co.nz
But it was rigged to go off with the weight of a truck, not a man, and so it didn't go off.
www.npr.org
They need money to fix all the broken items, so they wish for buckets of gold and go off to buy some items.
en.wikipedia.org
They weren't allowed to go off with strange boys.
www.huffingtonpost.com
The two go off and spend some romantic time together in a gazebo.
en.wikipedia.org
Then they'd go off for one solo flight and circuit, then they were into battle.
en.wikipedia.org
I remember sitting at the side of the carriage, watching the rain pour down, fireworks go off and blue lights of the ambulances whirring.
en.wikipedia.org
But the average dad is usually balding and thick around the waist and the young good-looking nanny wouldn't be likely to go off with him, she said.
www.stuff.co.nz
So they send him out, drink 20 pints, go off with a couple of women, whatever he wants.
theprovince.com

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