How to use in-sentence of “come off”:
– After a while she gets up and starts walking away, but then the ropes come off around everyone.
– They do not come off easily, unlike porcupines, but in baby hedgehogs, the baby quills drop off and are replaced with adult quills.
– Roofs and some walls come off well-made houses; trains rolled over; most trees in forest uprooted; skyscrapers twisted and damaged; heavy cars lifted off the ground and thrown.
– Roofs come off frame houses; mobile homes destroyed; big trees snapped or uprooted.
– It happens when the ball has come off a footballer at his or her own goal.
– He used a glue that was originally too weak to be used for anything else, so the notes would come off easy.

