walk off with — • walk away with • walk off with take and go away with, take away, steal Someone walked away with the computer from the library last night … Idioms and examples
walk off with — ► walk off with (or away with) informal 1) steal. 2) win. Main Entry: ↑walk … English terms dictionary
walk off with — (something) to take something without asking. Who walked off with my drink? … New idioms dictionary
walk off with — index hold up (rob), jostle (pickpocket), poach Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
walk off with — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms walk off with : present tense I/you/we/they walk off with he/she/it walks off with present participle walking off with past tense walked off with past participle walked off with 1) walk off with something to… … English dictionary
walk off with — 1) PHRASAL VERB If someone walks off with something that does not belong to them, they take it without permission. [INFORMAL] [V P P n] I ll bet you walked off with my coat, too. Syn: go off with 2) PHRASAL VERB If you walk off with something… … English dictionary
walk off with — phrasal 1. a. : to steal and take away a sneak thief who walked off with $35,000 New York Times b. : to take over unexpectedly from someone else : steal II 1g a bit player who walked off with the show 2 … Useful english dictionary
walk off with (or away with) — informal 1》 steal. 2》 win. → walk … English new terms dictionary
walk off with something — walk off with (something) to take something without asking. Who walked off with my drink? … New idioms dictionary
walk off with — walk away with 1) informal she walked off with my wallet See steal 1. 1) 2) he walked off with four awards Syn: win easily, win hands down, attain, earn, gain, garner, receive, acquire, s … Thesaurus of popular words