pull off
1Pull-off — réalisé sur une guitare électrique Le pull off (de pull, « tirer » ou « crocheter » en anglais) est une technique de jeu pour instrument à cordes et plus particulièrement une technique guitaristique. Elle consiste pour la main …
2Pull off — Le pull off (de pull, « tirer » ou « crocheter » en anglais) est une technique de jeu pour instrument à cordes et plus particulièrement une technique guitaristique. Elle consiste pour la main active sur le manche, définie par… …
3pull off — (something) to succeed in doing something difficult or unexpected. He won five straight games and pulled off one of the tournament s biggest upsets. I don t know how you pulled it off, but we re now $5,000 richer than we were yesterday …
4pull off — ► pull off informal succeed in achieving or winning (something difficult). Main Entry: ↑pull …
5pull off — [v] accomplish achieve, bring off, carry out, manage, score, score a success, secure, succeed, win; concepts 91,706 Ant. fail …
6pull off — verb 1. pull or pull out sharply (Freq. 2) pluck the flowers off the bush • Syn: ↑pluck, ↑tweak, ↑pick off • Derivationally related forms: ↑tweak (for: ↑ …
7pull off — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms pull off : present tense I/you/we/they pull off he/she/it pulls off present participle pulling off past tense pulled off past participle pulled off 1) to succeed in doing something that is difficult Hanley… …
8Pull-off — A pull off is a stringed instrument technique performed by plucking a string by pulling the string off the fingerboard with one of the fingers being used to fret the note. DescriptionA pull off is often Fact|date=November 2007 performed on a… …
9pull off — 1) PHRASAL VERB If you pull off something very difficult, you succeed in achieving it. [V P n (not pron)] The National League for Democracy pulled off a landslide victory... [V n P] It will be a very, very fine piece of mountaineering if they… …
10pull-off — /pool awf , of /, n. 1. an act of pulling off: The inn is well worth a pull off from the Interstate. 2. a rest area at the side of a road where vehicles may park. [1855 60; n. use of v. phrase pull off] * * * …