词组 | naff off |
释义 | Phr V naff off Naff off! (always an order) British slang something that you say in order to tell someone to go away because they are annoying youJust tell those reporters to naff off! naff off verb to go away. From NAFF; made very familiar in the UK during the 1970s by the prison-set television situation comedy, Porridge, written by Clement and La Frenais. Perhaps the social highpoint of this word's history was during the 1982 Badminton Horse Trials when Princess Anne (now Princess Royal) asked the press, 'Why don't you just naff off?' UK, 1982naff off! BrE spoken informal used to rudely tell someone to go away because they are annoying you: If he bothers you again, just tell him to naff off.■ SIMILAR TO: go away, get lost informal naff offA forceful exclamation of dismissal, disdain, or impatience. Primarily heard in UK. Naff off, Jerry! I'm sick of listening to you gripe every day. Jenny: "I know Tom is interested in you. Why don't you go out with him?" Sally: "Would you naff off? I wouldn't be caught dead with someone like him!" |
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