START OFF


Meaning of START OFF in English

start off phrasal verb ( see also ↑ start )

1 . to begin something in a particular way, or to begin in a particular way

start something ↔ off with something/by doing something

The theater company started off their new season with a Shakespeare play.

start off with something/by doing something

I started off by drawing the flowers I had collected.

2 . to be a particular thing or have a particular quality at the beginning of something, especially when this changes later:

The puppies start off white, and get their black spots later.

start off as

The games start off as a social event, but players soon become competitive.

I started off as a drummer.

3 . start something ↔ off to make something begin happening:

We’re not sure what starts the process off.

4 . start somebody ↔ off to help someone begin an activity

start somebody ↔ off with

He started me off with some stretching exercises.

5 . to begin going somewhere:

I sat in the car for a few minutes before starting off.

start off to/towards/back etc

She started off to school in her new uniform.

6 . start somebody off British English informal to make someone get angry or start laughing, by saying something:

Don’t say that; that’ll just start him off.

start somebody off doing something

He made her jump, and that started her off giggling.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.