(stenoscript) Abbreviation of off, often
(usually in modal perfect constructions) Eye dialect spelling of have or ’ve, chiefly in depictions of colloquial speech.
A preposition "of" expresses distance or motion, can indicate "off" or "from" in terms of distance or direction, can indicate "since" or "from" in terms of time or earlier state, and can indicate "from" or "away from" in terms of position, number, or distance.
Used to express separation, indicating removal, absence, or separation with a transitive verb and the quality or substance by a grammatical object, or with an adjective indicating resulting state.
A preposition "of" expresses origin, introduces a birthplace or place associated with an individual, indicates a source of action or emotion, and indicates the source or cause of a verb or adjective.
Used to express agency, introduce the subjective genitive, and indicate the agent of something described by an adjective.
Used to indicate composition, substance, material, and the linking of two nouns in near-apposition.
A preposition "of" introduces subject matter and is used to link verbs and their subject, nouns of knowledge or communication, and adjectives to their subject matter.
A preposition "of" introduces a whole for which only a specified part or segment is indicated, indicates a given part, can mean some or an amount of, and links to a genitive noun or possessive pronoun with a partitive effect.
A word that expresses possession, belonging, ownership, control, or characteristics.
A preposition "of" forms the "objective genitive" and follows an agent noun, verbal noun, or noun of action.
Used to express qualities or characteristics, link an adjective with a noun or noun phrase, indicate a quality or characteristic, indicate quantity, age, price, etc., and link singular indefinite nouns and attributive adjectives modified by certain common adverbs of degree.
Used to express a point in time, indicating duration, repetition or regularity, and can also indicate the time before or up to a specific hour.