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Idiom
Off the chart.
If something goes off the chart, it far exceeds the normal standards, good or bad, for something.
Exact(1)
Gorman adds that 20% of O2 Tracks subscribers are buying at least one download a month, suggesting that the app is stimulating people to buy when songs they like fall off the chart or genre playlist they've been listening to.
Similar(59)
Newcomers arrived with big singles and bigger hopes, only to fall off the charts after selling a few hundred thousand copies, if that.
She is quick to embrace pop radio's most recent playlist and equally swift in her denunciations of artists who fall off the charts.
"I'd seen singers who sold a lot of records fall off the charts," Mr. Hall said in an interview at Fox Hollow, the 67-acre plantation south of Nashville that he bought with cash in 1969, using the royalties for "Harper Valley P.T.A.," the smash pop hit he wrote for Jeannie C. Riley.
That app shot to the top of the App Store like a bullet during its first few days of availability, only to fall off the charts in the subsequent weeks.
The game will fall off the charts.
The following week, it rose to position 21 and then proceeded to fall off the charts.
YouGov's tracking survey finds Corbyn viewed as twice as left-wing as Miliband, so hardline that he almost falls off the chart.
It fell off the chart in its third week.
It fell off the chart after eight weeks.
The following week, the song fell to number ninety before falling off the chart the next week.
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