fend off
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]fend off (third-person singular simple present fends off, present participle fending off, simple past and past participle fended off)
- To defend against; to repel with force or effort
- Synonyms: turn away, drive away, ward off
- They tried citronella to fend off the mosquitos, to no avail.
- 2024 April 27, Alastair Telfer, “England beat France to seal Grand Slam hat-trick”, in BBC Sport[1]:
- France spent large portions of the opening half in England territory and despite scoring the pick of the first-half tries - when Menager fended off Jess Breach to finish off a superb backs move - struggled to convert their chances.
- (nautical) To prevent (a vessel) from running against anything with too much violence.
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]to ward off, drive (something) away, defend against