to be much better than someone or something
to have sex with someone
to murder someone
to produce something quickly and carelessly, often a copy of something else
to reduce a price or an amount
to steal money or property from a place
to steal something
to stop working
used for telling someone to stop doing something
used for threatening to hit someone and hurt them very badly
After we've got Jessica off to bed we knock off a bottle of wine together.
Do they come out here at night to knock off wallabies or anything?
Do you want to knock off early tonight?
Forgers can knock off a fake passport in no time.
He had no alibi for the afternoon, and any number of motives for wanting to knock off Yvonne.
If there's a couple of billion dollars involved and the Mob wants it, they'll make sure they knock off anybody who could get in their way.
Kelly knocked two seconds off her previous time.
They knocked some TVs off from an electrical store.
They’d knocked off two banks the previous week.
They’ll knock something off the price if you collect it yourself.
knocks off
knocking off
knocked off
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
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