Meaning

  1. To start and event, activity, or progress.
  2. To start a match by kicking the ball often called football or soccer.
  3. To suddenly get angry or to cause a commotion.
  4. To pass away.

Today's Sentences

01

Our team will kick off first.

Situation

Who’s going to kick off the match tonight?

Our team will kick off first.

Then we need to score quickly.

Exactly, let’s go win this game!

02

How should we kick off Thanksgiving?

Situation

How should we kick off Thanksgiving this year?

I was thinking we could start by going pumpkin picking.

That sounds perfect!
Pumpkins always set the holiday mood.

Exactly, nothing better than to kick off Thanksgiving with a basket of bright orange pumpkins.

Writer's Note

"Kick off" is an intransitive, transitive, inseparable and separable phrasal verb. Let’s dive in with the structure and examples together.

  1. Intransitive - A phrasal verb that does not take an object; it makes sense on its own.
    Structure: "Subject + kick off (+ adverbial/time)"
    Example 1: The meeting will kick off at 9 a.m.
    Example 2: The concert kicked off with fireworks.
    Example 3: The soccer match kicks off in ten minutes.
  2. Transitive - A phrasal verb that needs an object to complete its meaning.
    Structure: "Subject + kick + object + off"
    Example 1: The coach kicked the season off with a motivational speech.
    Example 2: Let’s kick the party off with some music.
    Example 3: She kicked off the presentation by telling a funny story.
  3. Inseparable - A phrasal verb where the object must come after the whole phrase; you cannot split the verb and particle.
    Structure: "Subject + kick off (+ adverbial/time)"
    Example 1: The festival will kick off this weekend with a parade.
    Example 2: The lecture kicked off earlier than expected.
    Example 3: The campaign officially kicks off tomorrow.
  4. Separable - When the particle and verb are separated by an object.
    Structure: "Subject + kick + object + off"
    Example 1: They kicked the ceremony off with a moment of silence.
    Example 2: He always kicks meetings off by telling a joke.
    Example 3: The teacher kicked off the lesson with a quick review.

Related words: Begin, blow up, commence, croak, depart, die, erupt, expire, flare up, get going, launch, lose it, open, pass away, perish, protest, restart, riot, set in motion, start, start the game, trigger

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