Inappropriate; untoward.
Inoperative, disabled.
On the side furthest from the kerb (the right-hand side if one drives on the left).
Circumstanced.
Cancelled; not happening.
Disgusting, repulsive, abhorrent.
Presently unavailable.
Started on the way.
Rancid, rotten, gone bad.
Less than normal, in temperament or in result.
The off front wheel came loose.
Not fitted; not being worn.
Designating a time when one is not performing to the best of one's abilities.
In, or towards the half of the field away from the batsman's legs; the right side for a right-handed batsman.
Far; off to the side.
Designating a time when one is not strictly attentive to business or affairs, or is absent from a post, and, hence, a time when affairs are not urgent.
Placed after a number (of products or parts, as if a unit), in commerce or engineering.
Removed or subtracted from.
Used to indicate the location or direction of one thing relative to another, implying adjacency or accessibility via.
Out of the possession of.
Detached, separated, excluded or disconnected from; away from a position of attachment or connection to.
Used to express location at sea relative to land or mainland.
No longer wanting or taking.
Not positioned upon, or away from a position upon.
Beginning; starting point.
Offstage.
Used in various other ways specific to individual idiomatic phrases, e.g. bring off, show off, put off, tell off, etc. See the entry for the individual phrase.
Into a state of non-operation or non-existence.
So as to remove or separate, or be removed or separated.
In a direction away from the speaker or other reference point.
To switch off.
To kill.
Vertical; erect
Greater in height than breadth.
Of good morals; practicing ethical values.
Having the head approximately at a right angle with the shaft.
In its proper orientation; not overturned.
An upright piano.
An upright arcade game cabinet.
A leg
A word clued by the successive initial, middle, or final letters of the cross-lights in a double acrostic or triple acrostic.
A goal post.
Any vertical part of a structure.
To set upright or stand back up (something that has fallen).
In or into an upright position.