carry off in English

verb

be victorious, win a prize; succeed, handle successfully; cause death

Use "carry off" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "carry off" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "carry off", or refer to the context using the word "carry off" in the English Dictionary.

1. Which has to carry off this mountain.

2. You gentle so approach, carry off my palpitation.

3. This piano piece is difficult to carry off.

4. I must all which you give, you to carry off.

5. I am wondering if he will carry off the prize.

6. Cannot carry off happiness. Bitter and astringent. Warm and ache.

7. She was considering how she should carry off the situation.

8. Worse still, it could even carry off the baby in.

9. But they come over the Wall and raid, steal, carry off women.

10. And carry off European champion cup and all honors, realize all dreams.

11. And what you do carry off, I will give to the sword.

12. Worse still, it could even carry off the baby in its mouth.

13. A rapid intellect and ready eloquence may carry off a little impudence.

14. Only boys like the ones at Ferguson could carry off such an affront.

15. You to carry off a new look if it doesn't suit your character.

16. A ditch is a long , narrow place dug in the earth to carry off water.

17. Nevertheless, does God use the enemy death to carry off our loved ones to heaven?

18. That they will never capture or carry off from the settlements white women or children.

19. The Chinese are said to be swarming across the Amur carry off raw materials and women.

20. I carry off Madam Magloire, I enter my chamber, I pray for him and fall asleep.

21. He had lunched with the Wellands, hoping afterward to carry off May for a walk iii the Park.

22. 13 synonyms for Abduct: kidnap, seize, carry off, run off with, run away with, make off with, snatch

23. The Chinese are said to be swarming across the Amur river to carry off raw materials and women.

24. Often poachers do not bother to carry off the whole animal but cut away the calipee and abandon the rest.

25. The fairies Abduct human children, leaving 'changelings' in cradles, or carry off wives to act as 'wet nurses' or midwives

26. Of course many times these Bummers would take the opportunity to raid the house and take everything they could carry off

27. See synonyms for: Abduct / Abducted on Thesaurus.com verb (used with object) to carry off or lead away (a person) illegally and in secret or by force, especially to kidnap

28. Gravity, wind and water carry off the fragments of the craters and deposit them, often over long distances, as sediments into river beds, alluvial plains and on the bottom of the sea.

29. Asportation Asportation n [Latin asportatio, from asportare to carry off, from abs- away + portare to carry]: a carrying away ;specif: the carrying away of someone else's property that is an element of larceny Source: Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Law ©1996

30. Annihilate: 1 v kill in large numbers Synonyms: carry off , decimate , eliminate , eradicate , extinguish , wipe out decimate kill one in every ten, as of mutineers in Roman armies Type of: kill cause to die; put to death, usually intentionally or knowingly

31. The Blood stream is life itself and it is our job to keep it clean and pure so that we can have a good circulatory system for delivering food to the body properly and, in addition, to carry off the waste materials

32. Rape late 14c., "seize prey; Abduct, take by force," from rape (n.) and from Anglo-French raper (Old French rapir) "to seize, Abduct," a legal term, probably from past participle of Latin rapere "seize, carry off by force, Abduct" (see rapid)

33. By this it was provided that thereafter the captain of a cruiser who should impress an American citizen should be liable to heavy penalties, to be enacted by law; but as the preamble to this proposition read, "Whereas it is not lawful for a Belligerent to impress or carry off, from on board a neutral, seafaring persons _who are