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  • peel-off
    peel-off
    adjective
    designed to be peeled off from a backing or large sheet, usually of paper, before use; readied for use by peeling off.
  • peel off
    peel off
    verb
    to remove or be removed by peeling

peel-off

American  
[peel-awf, -of] / ˈpilˌɔf, -ˌɒf /

adjective

  1. designed to be peeled off from a backing or large sheet, usually of paper, before use; readied for use by peeling off.

    peel-off labels.


peel off British  

verb

  1. to remove or be removed by peeling

  2. slang (intr) to undress

  3. (intr) (of an aircraft) to turn away as by banking, and leave a formation

  4. slang to go away or cause to go away

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

peel off Idioms  
  1. Remove an outer layer of skin, bark, paint, or the like; also, come off in thin strips or pieces. For example, Peeling off birch bark can kill the tree , or Paint was peeling off the walls . [Late 1500s]

  2. Remove or separate, as in Helen peeled off her gloves and got to work , or Al peeled off a ten-dollar bill and gave it to the driver . [First half of 1900s]

  3. Also, peel away . Depart from a group, as in Ruth peeled off from the pack of runners and went down a back road . This expression originated in air force jargon during World War II and was used for an airplane or pilot that left flight formation, a sight that suggested the peeling of skin from a banana.


Etymology

Origin of peel-off

First recorded in 1935–40; adj. use of verb phrase peel off

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