Take off from Meaning in English
expression
ˈteɪk/ /ˈɔf/ /ˈfɹəm
TAYK-awf-FRUHM
tˈeɪk/ /ˈɒf/ /fɹˈɒm
TAYK-of-from
Definição
To leave the ground and begin flying from a specific place. Also used metaphorically to mean starting strongly or becoming successful from a place or point.
Uso & Nuances
Mostly used for planes, but also used for anything beginning energetically. Common forms: 'the plane took off from', 'the idea really took off from here.' Don't confuse with 'take off' (remove or leave quickly).
Spanish: despegar dePortuguese (BR): decolar dePortuguese (PT): descolar deChinese (Simplified): 从…起飞Chinese (Traditional): 從…起飛Hindi: से उड़ान भरनाArabic: يُقلِع منBengali: উড়ে যাওয়া (একটি নির্দিষ্ট স্থান থেকে) - শুরু হওয়া (একটি জায়গা থেকে)Russian: взлетать с (какого-либо места) - начинаться (откуда-либо)Japanese: 〜から離陸する - 〜から始まるVietnamese: cất cánh từ - bắt đầu (từ một nơi)Korean: ~에서 이륙하다 - ~에서 시작하다Turkish: -den havalanmak - (bir yerden) hızlıca başlamakUrdu: سے اُڑنا - (کسی مقام سے) شروع ہوناIndonesian: lepas landas dari - mulai berkembang dari
Frases de Exemplo
The plane will take off from gate 12 at noon.
basic
Birds take off from the tree every morning.
basic
The rocket will take off from the launch pad soon.
basic
This new startup really took off from a simple idea in a coffee shop.
natural
After hours of delay, we finally took off from the airport.
natural
Where did you take off from on your flight to Paris?
natural