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Definition 2025
beat_off
beat off
English
Verb
beat off (third-person singular simple present beats off, present participle beating off, simple past beat off, past participle beaten off)
- (transitive) To drive something away with blows or military force. Now often used figuratively.
- 1697, Carradoc Of Lhancarvan, The history of Wales, page 33:
- ...which Action did not so much grieve the English, as trouble and vex the Picts and Scots, who were incessantly gauled and frequently beat off by these Danish Troops.
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- (intransitive, idiomatic, vulgar, colloquial, chiefly US, Canada) To ****, usually a man of himself.
- 2003, David Burke, The Slangman guide to dirty English: dangerous expressions Americans use, page 13:
- Example 1: "I don't need a girlfriend. I just need some swimsuit catalogs, so I can beat off six or seven times a day."
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- (intransitive, idiomatic, vulgar, colloquial) To waste time.
- I beat off at work all day; I didn't get anything done.
Synonyms
- See Wikisaurus:****