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"zip off" is a correct and common phrase in written English.
It means to quickly and easily remove or detach something, often using a zipper. Example: "I need to zip off this jacket before we go inside, it's too warm in here."
Exact(21)
Cut the extra zip off, leaving 2cm spare (illustration A).
In any case the job never interferes with the heroine's ability to zip off to the Riviera.
But in space, a zebra spider would zip off in a straight line instead of a trajectory curved by gravity, missing its target.
He says, "I'm going to go home alone, with a big goose egg in the romance department, while you zip off with Monsieur Olivier".
Jeff Gorman, the chief executive, can zip off to pick up mayors and other officials and escort them back to his plant.
Along with David Tazzyman's drawings that are so packed full of energy they almost zip off the pages, it's a fantastic combination for a funny book.
Similar(39)
Thomas zips off to the Ropeswing.
In anger, she zipped off a rebuttal letter.
The cover zips off so you can bung it in the washing machine.
"It looks like something Elroy Jetson would've climbed aboard and zipped off to school".
"This is in an embryonic stage," she added, before zipping off into her own elevator.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com