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Discover LudwigThe phrase "off the rock" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is usually used to indicate that something or someone has moved away from a solid surface or foundation. Example: The boat was pushed off the rock by a strong wave.
Exact(21)
The abalone did not want to come off the rock.
"I think he comes off the rock, and he tries to create havoc".
But local surfers simply paddled past it, turning left at the end of the fence and paddling for the rolling waves breaking off the rock jetty.
"The best part was the highest jump that we took off the rock into the water," said Chuck Fletcher, a police officer from Milwaukee.
Soon, I came upon a crowd gathered in an inner sanctum, and saw a monk in a black hood and a golden cape singing in a rich baritone, his voice echoing off the rock walls.
Though she was taken off the rock and the breathing tubes were removed a couple of days later, sodium solution had to be constantly administered, at the expense of her T.P.N., and her levels still didn't return to normal.
Similar(39)
I fish for tautog off the rocks with Jimmy.
Rapid growth eventually lifted all boats off the rocks.
A colony of seals live off the rocks at Life Boat Bay.
"We need to get them off the rocks," he said.
Corrections officers dragged the dome off the rocks, using a winch on a tow truck.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com