ˈrun-off
61run off at the mouth — in. to talk too much; to have diarrhea of the mouth. □ I wish you would stop running off at the mouth. □ Tom runs off at the mouth too much. I wish he would temper his remarks …
62run off at the mouth — vp To talk too much. He is always running off at the mouth. 1950s …
63run\ off\ at\ the\ mouth — v. phr. To talk too much; be unable to stop talking. Shut up, John, our father cried. You are always running off at the mouth …
64run off with — (smth) go away with someone, elope My sister ran off with her boyfriend and got married when she was quite young …
65run off with — he ran off with her money See steal 1. 1) …
66run-off — all water leaving a drainage basin …
67run off — escape; print, make copies; produce quickly; drive away, expel; hold an additional race to determine the winner after an unclear previous match …
68Run off — That portion of the precipitation that flows over the land surface and ultimately reaches streams to complete the water cycle. Melting snow is an important source of this water as well as all amounts of surface water that move to streams or… …
69run-off — noun 1》 a further contest after a tie or inconclusive result. 2》 the draining away of rainfall or other liquid from the surface of an area. ↘the liquid that drains in this way. 3》 NZ a separate area of land where young animals are kept …
70run·off — /ˈrʌnˌɑːf/ noun, pl offs 1 [count] : an additional race, contest, or election that is held because an earlier one has not resulted in a winner 2 [noncount] : water from rain or snow that flows over the surface of the ground into streams …