pick someone off

pick someone off
pick (someone/something) off 1. to kill or shoot one person or animal at a time.

Snipers picked the soldiers off one by one.

The birds in the nest were picked off by hawks.

2. to select and attack or defeat a particular person or group.

During the race I just picked off the runners ahead of me one at a time.

We try to identify these criminal groups and pick their leaders off before they can cause too much trouble.

The Republicans picked off Democrats in Oklahoma, Alabama, and Mississippi in the last election.


New idioms dictionary. 2014.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

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  • pick something off — pick (someone/something) off 1. to kill or shoot one person or animal at a time. Snipers picked the soldiers off one by one. The birds in the nest were picked off by hawks. 2. to select and attack or defeat a particular person or group. During… …   New idioms dictionary

  • pick someone up — 1 I ll pick you up after lunch: FETCH, collect, call for. 2 (informal) he was picked up by the police: ARREST, apprehend, detain, take into custody, seize; …   Useful english dictionary

  • pick someone/thing off — shoot a member of a group from a distance. → pick …   English new terms dictionary

  • pick someone up — informal 1) he was picked up by the police Syn: arrest, apprehend, detain, take into custody, seize; informal nab, run in; Brit.; informal nick 2) he picked her up in a club Syn: meet; informal ge …   Synonyms and antonyms dictionary

  • pick off — verb 1. shoot one by one (Freq. 1) • Hypernyms: ↑shoot, ↑pip • Verb Frames: Somebody s somebody 2. pull or pull out sharply (Freq. 1) pluck the flowers off the bush …   Useful english dictionary

  • pick someone/something off — shoot a member of a group of people or things, aiming carefully from a distance ■ Baseball put out a runner by a pickoff …   Useful english dictionary

  • pick — Ⅰ. pick [1] ► VERB 1) (often pick up) take hold of and move. 2) remove (a flower or fruit) from where it is growing. 3) choose from a number of alternatives. 4) remove unwanted matter from (one s nose or teeth) with a finger or a pointed… …   English terms dictionary

  • pick off — pick (someone/something) off 1. to kill or shoot one person or animal at a time. Snipers picked the soldiers off one by one. The birds in the nest were picked off by hawks. 2. to select and attack or defeat a particular person or group. During… …   New idioms dictionary

  • pick — 1 /pIk/ verb (T) 1 CHOOSE STH to choose someone or something good or suitable from a group or range of people or things: Students have to pick three courses from a list of 15. | Let me pick a few examples at random. | pick your words (=be careful …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • pick — pick1 W1S1 [pık] v [T] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(choose something)¦ 2¦(flowers/fruit etc)¦ 3¦(remove something)¦ 4 pick your way through/across/among etc something 5 pick your nose 6 pick your teeth 7 pick somebody s brains 8 pick a quarrel/fight (with… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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