- sod off
- intransitive verb Etymology: 4sod Date: 1960 British scram — usually used as a command
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
sod off — (vulgar sl; usu imperative) To go away • • • Main Entry: ↑sod * * * sod off Brit informal + impolite used to tell someone to leave or go away Sod off or I ll call the police. • • • Main Entry: ↑sod * * * … Useful english dictionary
sod off — phrasal verb [intransitive, always in imperative] Word forms sod off : present tense I/you/we/they sod off he/she/it sods off present participle sodding off past tense sodded off past participle sodded off British impolite a) used for telling… … English dictionary
sod off — verb Go away. Why dont you just sod off and leave me alone? Syn: register, bugger off, be off, depart, go, go away, leave, take off, take ones leave … Wiktionary
sod off — vb British to leave, go away. The phrase is almost always an imperative, sometimes con veying only mild annoyance or aggres sion. ► I told them to sod off and leave me alone … Contemporary slang
sod off — PHRASAL VERB: only imper If someone tells someone else to sod off, they are telling them in a very rude way to go away or leave them alone. [BRIT, INFORMAL, RUDE] … English dictionary
sod off — Verb. Go away, leave. Usually used in the imperative. E.g. If he doesn t sod off in the next 2 minutes I m going to hit him … English slang and colloquialisms
Sod Off, God! We Believe in Our Rockband — is the first and only album released by Swedish hard rock band Rallypack. In 2006 Rallypack became Lillasyster.The songs#Pissman #Long Ride #Book of Instructions #Luke Skywalker #7 Eleven Shaolin #Piss on a Piano #La Samba Mei #And in the Car #I… … Wikipedia
sod off — go away. → sod … English new terms dictionary
Sod off — exclamation of rejection, dismissal, etc.; piss off! (shortened form of sodomite , used as an insult) … Dictionary of Australian slang
sod off — Australian Slang exclamation of rejection, dismissal, etc.; piss off! (shortened form of sodomite , used as an insult) … English dialects glossary