Wear off Meaning in English
expression
ˈwɛɹ/ /ˈɔf
WAIR-awf
wɛə/ /ˈɒf
WAIR-of
التعريف
To gradually become less strong or disappear, especially when talking about the effects of something like medicine, feelings, or other influences.
الاستخدام والفروق الدقيقة
Commonly used for effects of medicine, emotions, or excitement; informal and natural in conversation. Usually not used for physical objects (clothes, etc.). 'Wear off' focuses on the gradual reduction, not a sudden stop.
Spanish: desvanecerse - pasar (efecto)Portuguese (BR): passar - desaparecer (efeito)Portuguese (PT): passar - desaparecer (efeito)Chinese (Simplified): 消退 - 逐渐失效Chinese (Traditional): 消退 - 逐漸失效Hindi: कम होना - उतरना (असर)Arabic: يزول - يختفي (تأثير)Bengali: কমানো - হ্রাস পাওয়াRussian: проходить - ослабеватьJapanese: 徐々に消える - 薄れるVietnamese: giảm dần - mất dầnKorean: 서서히 사라지다 - 점차 없어지다Turkish: azalmak - etkisi geçmekUrdu: آہستہ آہستہ ختم ہونا - مدھم پڑناIndonesian: berkurang secara perlahan - menghilang secara bertahap
جمل نموذجية
The pain will wear off in a few hours.
basic
The excitement from the party didn't wear off until the next day.
basic
The medicine takes a while to wear off.
basic
Give it some time. The numbness should wear off soon.
natural
After the effects of the coffee wore off, I felt tired again.
natural
Don’t worry, the shock will wear off eventually.
natural