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Offset   /ɔfsˈɛt/  /ˈɔfsˌɛt/   Listen
verb
Offset  v. t.  (past & past part. offset; pres. part. offsetting)  
1.
To set off; to place over against; to balance; as, to offset one account or charge against another.
2.
To form an offset in, as in a wall, rod, pipe, etc.



Offset  v. i.  (past & past part. offset; pres. part. offsetting)  (Printing) To make an offset.



noun
Offset  n.  In general, that which is set off, from, before, or against, something; as:
1.
(Bot.) A short prostrate shoot, which takes root and produces a tuft of leaves, etc.
2.
A sum, account, or value set off against another sum or account, as an equivalent; hence, anything which is given in exchange or retaliation; a set-off.
3.
A spur from a range of hills or mountains.
4.
(Arch.) A horizontal ledge on the face of a wall, formed by a diminution of its thickness, or by the weathering or upper surface of a part built out from it; called also set-off.
5.
(Surv.) A short distance measured at right angles from a line actually run to some point in an irregular boundary, or to some object.
6.
(Mech.) An abrupt bend in an object, as a rod, by which one part is turned aside out of line, but nearly parallel, with the rest; the part thus bent aside.
7.
(Print.) A more or less distinct transfer of a printed page or picture to the opposite page, when the pages are pressed together before the ink is dry or when it is poor; an unitended transfer of an image from one page to another; called also setoff.
Offset staff (Surv.), a rod, usually ten links long, used in measuring offsets.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Offset" Quotes from Famous Books



... epics on the Infantes of Lara and on Fernan Gonzales, and hints of others of which no traces now remain. These poems were popularized in Spain by the juglares, who invented Bernardo del Carpio so as to have a hero worthy to offset to the Roland of the jongleurs,—their French neighbors. But the poems about this hero have all perished, and his fame is preserved only in the prose chronicles. In the Cronica rimada of the thirteenth century, we ...
— The Book of the Epic • Helene A. Guerber

... dare to return to them; since the return of the criminal over the path by which he escaped into secrecy gave him into the hands of his pursuers. The old house had become the property of strangers. The offset to this grief was the fact that Sonia would never dishonor it again with her presence. Just now dabbling in her sins down by the summer sea, she was probably reading the letter which he had sent her about business ...
— The Art of Disappearing • John Talbot Smith

... voluntarily much greater poverty than need be entailed by only doing half the usual day's work in a well-organized Socialist community; and some degree of hardship is not objectionable, as a test of the strength of the creative impulse, and as an offset to the peculiar joys of the ...
— Proposed Roads To Freedom • Bertrand Russell

... the columns, the outer walls of rough marble rose twenty stories to the first offset. Dropping back fifty feet, another structure, crowned by Greek facades, sprang ten stories higher, forming the base of the central dome. From each corner rose a tower of bronze supporting the figures of Faith, Hope, Love and Truth, while scores of minarets flamed upward, flying the ...
— The One Woman • Thomas Dixon

... foot-path—up its precipitous sides, which had to be climbed hundreds of feet, perpendicularly, by means of ladders fastened to its sides. After going up one ladder, say fifty or seventy-five feet, we would come to a little offset in the mountain side, just wide enough to get a foot-hold, before taking another ladder. Some of the boldest climbers took this route to reach the summit, but after climbing the first ladder and looking ...
— History of Kershaw's Brigade • D. Augustus Dickert


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