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day off

NOUN
  1. a day when you are not required to work
    Thursday is his day off

How To Use day off In A Sentence

  • He was not at the count as he was unable to take a day off work but delighted supporters phoned to let him know the result.
  • The Cameo cinema in Edinburgh has just announced an Eighties all-nighter, featuring saccharine delights such as Pretty in Pink and Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
  • Great Britain finalised their preparations at Salford and will have today off in readiness for tomorrow's sell-out clash.
  • The demonstrators were mostly schoolchildren given the day off, army conscripts and public employees encouraged to go on the march in their working hours. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the meantime, down the road in Piraeus where Melina Mercouri was filmed in 1960 singing a song about her sacred day off from work called Never On A Sunday, the Chinese last June took over full control of the major container dock, pledging to spend $700 million to construct a new pier and upgrade existing docks. Vanessa Andris: Greece: Never on a Sunday But Bail Us Out on Monday? Defeat or Development
  • She took a day off of classes to attend the event because she wants to help her mom, the current owner of Kchelly's Beauty Center in Irvington, N.J. "She's thinking of handing [the business] to me," explains Ms. Darden, who is currently a manager at the salon and beauty-supply store. Need Advice? We'll Give You 30 Minutes
  • The idea of taking a day off seemed impractical at the time. Christianity Today
  • Making camp in the Mulga we drew water from the Bore for showers & washing, settling in for a well deserved day off.
  • Passi was on a three-day official visit to Denmark at the invitation of his colleague Moeller.
  • We were all promised blizzards and arctic blasts today, and I dare say everyone was looking forward to being snowed in and enjoying a day off work snuggled up in front of the telly.
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