Use "cast off" in a sentence

1. Cast off four stitches.

2. The material cast off during molting.

3. She had cast off the lines.

4. He cast off his dog at once.

5. She tried to cast off her upbringing.

6. The snake cast off its old skin.

7. That one with the cast-off horseshoe.

8. They cast off their boat yesterday morning.

9. He cast off, heading out to the bay.

10. Guests were encouraged to cast off their inhibitions.

11. The ship was scheduled to cast off at 8pm.

12. She's cast off three boy-friends in a month.

13. When the scarf is the right length, cast off.

14. Knit 1 row and cast off in same manner.

15. They cast off their clothes and jumped in the pool.

16. He cast off fear and decided to make a try.

17. At the end of the row, cast off seven stitches.

18. The town is still trying to cast off its dull image.

19. The fisherman cast off the rope and set the boat adrift.

20. Abjected (not comparable) (obsolete) That has been cast off or rejected.

21. By 030 we had cast off and were heading down-river.

22. Abjections specifically means.."the state of being cast off"

23. The term Abjection literally means ‘the state of being cast off

24. * Did this mean that Samuel was cast off, unloved by his parents?

25. It's time to cast off those winter blues and burst into spring!

26. They were as the children of fools and cast off their clothes.

27. Mr Brown cast off his daughter when she married an old rich man.

28. The essay exhorts women to cast off their servitude to husbands and priests.

29. The millionaire cast off his daughter when she married a poor young man.

30. Now the hard winter has gone, we can cast off our winter clothing.

31. He will never cast off those who strive in all sincerity to please him.

32. Drifting, afloat, cast off, unmoored, aweigh, unanchored They were spotted Adrift in a dinghy

33. But thou hast cast off and abhorred, thou hast been wroth with thine anointed.

34. Olive Wood Cast Off Cuttings / Cutoffs / Turning blanks Lumber / like cubs ( see photos ) olivewood2000

35. But other brave mariners cast off their fears and took to the open sea.

36. They grab hold of the killer's flesh, clamp tight and then cast off the claw.

37. (Galatians 6:7, 8) Because the Israelites cast off good, they reaped what was bad.

38. We don't know how long it'll be before I get the cast off my arm.

39. 10 James: I provide this cast - off edition of the entrepot is a literate journal.

40. The fresh pupa, having cast off its pliable caterpillar skin, had hardened and become black-brown.

41. The reform of economics and development, want those who cast off doctrinairism book worship to manacle.

42. 4Ib ( 1850g ) Olive Wood Cast Off Cuttings / Cutoffs / Pen Turning blanks .Lumber / 100 - 120 pieces / chunks JerusalemProducts

43. I've cast off your book and think it will come to about 150 pages when it's printed.

44. 13 words related to Abscise: Abscise, cast off, shed, throw off, throw away, shake off, throw, cast

45. 18 The fresh pupa, having cast off its pliable caterpillar skin, had hardened and become black-brown.

46. Apostatize: 1 v abandon one's beliefs or allegiances Synonyms: Apostatise , tergiversate Type of: disown , renounce , repudiate cast off

47. Many pagan practices were cast off by the reformers, the celebration of Allhallows Eve being one of them.

48. Planetary nebula Mz3 is being cast off by a star similar to our Sun that is, surely, round.

49. Once the luggage was stowed away on board Penry lifted her on the deck of the Angharad and cast off.

50. Of the three Archdeacons of the Deep, one cast off his white crown and left the cathedral to stand by Aldrich."

51. In addition, gardeners can look on the soil under infested plants for Aphids’ cast-off skins, which look like small white flakes

52. Abject comes from "Abjectus," the past participle of the Latin verb abicere, meaning "to cast off." Its original meaning in English was "cast off" or "rejected," but it is now used to refer more broadly to things in a low state or condition.

53. Having cast off her blazer, she sat there, Lolita-like, practised pout in place, effectively daring him to manhandle her off his knees.

54. 29 Having cast off her blazer, she sat there, Lolita-like, practised pout in place, effectively daring him to manhandle her off his knees.

55. abject (third-person singular simple present abjects, present participle Abjecting, simple past and past participle abjected) (transitive, obsolete) To cast off or out; to reject

56. Apostatize - abandon one's beliefs or allegiances apostatise , tergiversate repudiate , disown , renounce - cast off; "She renounced her husband"; "The parents repudiated their son"

57. At Chittagong, outer anchorage and/or at Chalna anchorage, time lost due to cast off of mother vessel with lighter because of swell, not to count as laytime.

58. “The night is far spent, the day is at hand: let us therefore cast off the works of darkness, and let us put on the armour of light.

59. The term Abjection literally means “the state of being cast off.” The term has been explored in post-structuralism as that which inherently disturbs conventional identity and cultural concepts

60. [First attested from around (1350 to 1470).] an Abjection from the beatific regions where God, and his angels and saints, dwell forever (obsolete, chiefly figuratively) Something cast off; garbage.

61. In gen., to cast off, throw away, give up, etc.: “ ut primum tenebris Abjectis inalbabat, ” as soon as the day, having dispelled the darkness, was beginning to brighten, Enn

62. For to be free is not merely to cast off one's chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others. Nelson Mandela 

63. At Chittagong anchorage, if a lighter vessel is required to cast off from the mother ship, due to heavy swell and/or bad weather, all time lost will not count as laytime.

64. THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS JOHN FOREMAN And the degraded society, like the robe which once covered the living body, but is afterwards cast off, is faded and Corrupt. THE ORDINANCE OF COVENANTING JOHN CUNNINGHAM

65. The term Abjection literally means "the state of being cast off." The concept of abject exists in between the concept of an object and the concept of the subject, something alive yet not.

66. At Chittagong anchorage and/or at Mongla anchorage, if a lighter vessel is required to cast off from the mother ship, due to heavy swell and/or bad weather, all time lost will not count as laytime.

67. The most success I've had with Convoke in arenas is either the opposing team does stupid stuff, or I can successfully bait the CC's/interrupts and get our own team's CC train going to get a clean cast off

68. The adverb is Abjectly, the nouns are Abjectness and Abjection.Abject first appears in the English language in the fifteenth century meaning cast off, rejected.Abject comes from the Latin word abiectus, which is the past participle of abicere, meaning to throw away, cast

69. The adverb is abjectly, the nouns are Abjectness and abjection.Abject first appears in the English language in the fifteenth century meaning cast off, rejected.Abject comes from the Latin word abiectus, which is the past participle of abicere, meaning to throw away, cast

70. ‘Ropes were cast off and stevedores moved in with Bargepoles to keep the hull clear of the wharf.’ ‘Prehistoric seafarers casting off from their home islands to settle elsewhere would have been sure to take along breadfruit trees, which provide an abundance of fruit.’

71. ‘Ropes were cast off and stevedores moved in with Bargepoles to keep the hull clear of the wharf.’ ‘Agents take it upon themselves to assist port operators, stevedores, and everybody involved in the successful operation of ships coming to, sailing from, or berthed at New Zealand ports.’

72. Abscise - shed flowers and leaves and fruit following formation of a scar tissue Abscise - remove or separate by abscission cast off , shed , throw off , throw away , shake off , throw , cast , drop - get rid of; "he shed his image as a pushy boss"; "shed your clothes"

73. Abscise: 1 v remove or separate by abscission Type of: chop off , cut off , lop off remove by or as if by cutting v shed flowers and leaves and fruit following formation of a scar tissue Type of: cast , cast off , drop , shake off , shed , throw , throw away , throw off get rid of

74. Crustaceans generally have many pairs of appendages larger species 5 or more pairs of walking legs most appendages are biramous they branch like a “wishbone”; one of the branches usually has a gill attached at its base most Crustaceans can cast off legs or pinchers and regrow them voluntary (striated) muscle tissue arranged in

75. It dawns on the man, in Allegorical death, that it is neither possible nor necessary to cast off the trappings of culture that comprise his conditioned life, nor need he cross any putative hallowed threshold to gain the freedom embodied by the Law (a law being the one thing that is not subject to itself), because he realizes that

76. When a person has experienced the deep sorrow and humility induced by a conviction of sin; when he has cast off the sin and resolutely determined to abhor it henceforth; when he has humbly confessed his sin to God and to the proper persons on earth—when these things are done there remains the requirement of restitution.

77. How often have I longed to carry offsome wretched child, Beflowered and bedisened, flirting away in cast-off fashions and with the most ridiculous airs in the world, and first to whip her soundly with a good and true English birch, then put tier to bed before midnight (their usual hour) and array her >oor wasted and plnched-up figure in good

78. Crap (v.) "to defecate," 1846, from a cluster of older nouns, now dialectal or obsolete, applied to things cast off or discarded (such as "weeds growing among corn" (early 15c.), "residue from renderings" (late 15c.), underworld slang for "money" (18c.), and in Shropshire, "dregs of beer or ale"), all probably from Middle English Crappe "grain that was trodden underfoot in a barn, chaff" (mid