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A Writer's Dictionary:

dash something off Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with D » dash off something ... day in, day out » dash something off


dash1
verb dashes, dashed, dashing
    intr
    1. To run quickly; to rush.
      Thesaurus: sprint, race, speed, hurry, run, bound, dart, rush, fly, hasten, bolt, tear.
    intr
    2. To crash or smash.
      Thesaurus: crash, smash, shatter, break, splinter.
    3. To hit or smash it violently.
      Thesaurus: bludgeon, hit, beat, cudgel, smash, slam.
      Form: dash against something (often)
    4. To destroy or put an end to (hopes, etc).
      Thesaurus: dampen, disappoint, frustrate.
noun dashes
    1. A quick run or sudden rush.
      Thesaurus: sprint, race, run.
    2. A small amount of something added, especially a liquid.
      Thesaurus: sprinkle, pinch, bit, taste, soupçon, little, hint, touch, trace, suggestion.
    3. A patch of colour.
    4. A short line (-) used in writing to show a break in a sentence, etc.
    5. In Morse code: the longer of the two lengths of signal element, written as a short line. Compare dot.
    6. Confidence, enthusiasm and stylishness.
    (N Amer)
    7. sport.
      A short race for fast runners.
    8. A dashboard.
Etymology: 14c as dasch; from earlier daschen or dassen to rush or strike violently.

Phrasal Verb: dash off
    To leave abruptly.
Phrasal Verb: dash off something or dash something off
    To produce or write it hastily.
Info:
    1. long dash ―
    ○ introduces an explanation or expansion &wbox;
    Alternative style (more formal): a colon.
    ○ It introduces an emphatic comment &wbox;
    ○ In pairs, it encloses an emphatic comment
    ○ In pairs, it encloses an inserted comment or aside
    Alternative styles (less informal): a pair of commas; (less informal still) a pair of round brackets.
    2. short dash ‐
    ○ links the limits of a range &wbox; &wbox; &wbox; &wbox;
    Don't use a dash to link items in a phrase beginning with ‘between' or ‘from':
    ○ It links two or more words that together modify a following word &wbox; &wbox; &wbox; .


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