run off
31run off with something — ˌrun ˈoff with sth derived to steal sth and take it away • The treasurer had run off with the club s funds. Main entry: ↑runderived …
32run off at the mouth — {v. phr.} To talk too much; be unable to stop talking. * / Shut up, John, our father cried. You are always running off at the mouth. / …
33run off at the mouth — {v. phr.} To talk too much; be unable to stop talking. * / Shut up, John, our father cried. You are always running off at the mouth. / …
34run off at the mouth N. Amer. — run off at the mouth N. Amer. informal talk excessively or indiscreetly. → run …
35run off one's feet — Exhausted by overwork • • • Main Entry: ↑run …
36run off with something — run off with (something) to take something that does not belong to you. The dog ran off with my shoe …
37run off with — (something) to take something that does not belong to you. The dog ran off with my shoe …
38run off with — index carry away, hold up (rob), jostle (pickpocket), kidnap, poach Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton …
39Run-off area — A run off area is an area on a racetrack that exists for racer safety. Run off areas are usually located along a race course in places that are the most likely places for racers to unintentionally depart from the prescribed course due to a… …
40run off with — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms run off with : present tense I/you/we/they run off with he/she/it runs off with present participle running off with past tense ran off with past participle run off with informal 1) run off with someone to… …