get off with (someone)

get off with (someone)
Verb. To achieve an intimate or sexual communing with (someone). E.g."I presume you got off with that bloke last night, being as you didn't come home?"

English slang and colloquialisms. 2014.

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  • get off with (someone) — Verb. To achieve an intimate or sexual communing with (someone). E.g. I presume you got off with that bloke last night, being as you didn t come home? …   English slang and colloquialisms

  • get off with — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms get off with : present tense I/you/we/they get off with he/she/it gets off with present participle getting off with past tense got off with past participle got off with British informal get off with someone to …   English dictionary

  • get off with — PHRASAL VERB If you get off with someone, you start a romantic or sexual relationship with them. [BRIT, INFORMAL] [V P P n] I got off with a cute boy from Nottingham …   English dictionary

  • get off with — ˌget ˈoff with [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they get off with he/she/it gets off with present participle getting off with past tense …   Useful english dictionary

  • ˌget ˈoff with sb — phrasal verb British informal to start a new sexual relationship with someone …   Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • get off with — verb To kiss someone, especially a long, public kiss. Syn: make out with, hook up with, go with …   Wiktionary

  • get off with — Irish Slang (someone) make out, kiss …   English dialects glossary

  • get off — {v.} 1. To come down from or out of. * /The ladder fell, and Tom couldn t get off the roof./ * /The bus stopped, the door opened, and Father got off./ 2. To take off. * /Joe s mother told him to get his wet clothes off./ 3. To get away; leave. *… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • get off — {v.} 1. To come down from or out of. * /The ladder fell, and Tom couldn t get off the roof./ * /The bus stopped, the door opened, and Father got off./ 2. To take off. * /Joe s mother told him to get his wet clothes off./ 3. To get away; leave. *… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • get off — phrasal verb Word forms get off : present tense I/you/we/they get off he/she/it gets off present participle getting off past tense got off past participle got off 1) a) [intransitive/transitive, usually in imperative] used for telling someone to… …   English dictionary

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