screw off
Appearance
See also: screw-off
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
[edit]screw off (third-person singular simple present screws off, present participle screwing off, simple past and past participle screwed off)
- To remove the lid of a jar or other container by unscrewing it.
- 2004, Cathy Myata, Speaking rules!: Games and activities for creating effective speakers, presenters and storytellers, page 52:
- Hold it in two hands and screw off the lid. Set the lid down. Inside are pickled onions.
- (idiomatic, colloquial) To fail to do one's work; to goof off.
- When the boss wasn't around on the weekend they would sometimes screw off.
- 1878, Robert White Stevens, On the stowage of ships and their cargoes: with information regarding freights, charter parties, &c., &c., page 798:
- On account of the high rate of wages at Sydney, stevedores will not "screw off" now so willingly as they did formerly.
- (idiomatic, colloquial) To leave; to bugger off.
- I finished the work early so I screwed off.
Interjection
[edit]- (idiomatic, vulgar, dismissal) To tell someone to leave or to stop being bothersome.
- I said no. Now screw off!
- (idiomatic, possibly vulgar) An expression of surprise or disbelief.
- "We just won a new car!" "Screw off! You're joking, right?"
Usage notes
[edit]As a way of urging someone to leave, it is considered vulgar in many settings but may be only a lighthearted rebuke in others.
See also
[edit]Categories:
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English verbs
- English phrasal verbs
- English phrasal verbs formed with "off"
- English multiword terms
- English terms with quotations
- English idioms
- English colloquialisms
- English terms with usage examples
- English interjections
- English vulgarities
- English dismissals
- English sentences