boom off
verbDefinitions
To resound against (a surface).
- The music boomed off the walls of the venue.
To move away quickly.
- The train boomed off to the west.
To boom as a result of (something) (to flourish, grow, or progress).
- The economy will boom off the exploitation of offshore oil.
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To explode (a door) to gain access.
- The cops boomed off my door.
To mark off an area (of water, or sometimes land) using booms (a floating barrier used to…
To mark off an area (of water, or sometimes land) using booms (a floating barrier used to obstruct navigation) or something similar.
- They boomed off the oil slick.
To shoot using (something)
To shoot using (something); to be fired.
- He booms off his glock as he enters the room.
- The cannons boomed off.
To blow off or brush off (somebody)
To blow off or brush off (somebody); to dismiss (somebody) as unimportant.
- The bureaucrats can boom him off when he comes to them with ideas.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for boom off. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA