Turnoff
noun
1.
a small road that branches off from a larger one, especially a ramp or exit leading off a major highway:
He took the wrong turnoff and it took him some 15 minutes to get back on the turnpike.
2.
a place at which one diverges from or changes a former course.
3.
an act of turning off.
4.
the finished product of a certain manufacturing process, as weaving.
5.
the quantity of fattened livestock distributed to market.
6.
Slang. something or someone that makes one unsympathetic or antagonistic.
Read Also:
- Turn-off
verb (used with object) 1. to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel. 2. to cause to move around or partly around, as for the purpose of opening, closing, or tightening: to turn a key; to turn the cap of a jar. 3. to reverse the […]
- Turn-off point
noun in astronomy, the point on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram at which brighter stars leave the Main Sequence and start evolving into giants Usage Note science
- Turn of phrase
A particular arrangement of words, as in I’d never heard that turn of phrase before, or An idiom can be described as a turn of phrase. This idiom alludes to the turning or shaping of objects (as on a lathe), a usage dating from the late 1600s.
- Turn-of-the-screw
noun 1. a short novel (1898) by Henry James.
- Turn of the tide
A reversal of fortune, as in This last poll marked the turn of the tide, with our candidate gaining a sizable majority. Similarly, to turn the tide means “reverse a situation,” as in The arrival of reinforcements turned the tide in the battle. This idiom transfers the ebb and flow of the ocean’s tides to […]