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"I come off" is correct and usable in written English.
In this context, it usually means to stop doing something or to take a break from something, for example: "I'm exhausted, I think I'll come off the treadmill now." It can also mean to detach oneself from something, for example: "He came off the project after some disagreements with the team."
Exact(58)
"I come off as being pretentious and all that stuff.
I come off the worst, no matter what!
In Rainbow, I come off stage quite confused sometimes.
"She said: 'Why would I come off it?
Or would I come off as a pedophile?
"I come off stage soaking, like I've been playing squash".
"I think I come off a little cleaner than I really am," he admits.
"Whether I come off the bench or start, it really doesn't matter," he said.
It just depends how I come off that marathon," he told BBC Radio 5 Live.
Similar(2)
I came off antidepressants last year.
I came off sick in 2013.
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