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Discover Ludwig"clock off" is a common phrase used in English.
It typically means to end the workday; when the person clocks off work, they are done for the day. For example: I'm clocking off at 4 pm today- I have to pick up my daughter from school.
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Clock off Is it time for doctors to prescribe volunteering?
Rivers faced a decision that coaches at all levels wrestle with: whether to foul with a 3-point lead and the shot clock off.
In June, the Guardian's Society Professionals Network will be running a project named Clock off, which will be exploring the mental and physical wellbeing of the public and voluntary sector's workforce.
Many of us log on to a handkerchief of granite grey on a Monday morning, and say goodbye to it on a Friday evening as we sign out and clock off.
Additionally, you can say goodbye to oversleeping on weekends, as it can throw your entire biological clock off.
So, once we'd made it, why not just clock off for the day, and go sit in a park?
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You could almost run a digital alarm-clock off this kind of awesome power-surge.
There hasn't been a single wicket since I tuned in shortly after the lunch-break!" Since I am banking on an early-doors clock-off and you are obviously hexing the South African attack, can you nick off for a couple of hours, then, please, Sunil.
As Jane says: "Through Shared Lives, people create relationships and love and family". As Dawn cuddles Tia and coos, "Who could not love you?" it is obvious that Dawn doesn't clock-off after the five hours for which she is paid.
We had one clock-off for Lance Hohaia's try, the rest were kick-tries and it's obviously something we have to work on".
We had one clock-off for Lance Hohaia's try, the rest were kick-tries and it's obviously something we have to work on". "You can't underestimate those conditions.
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