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HifaMo Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

hit off perfectly with/ perfectly hit off with

Hi,

Please, which one is better?

His late arrival hit off perfectly with our plan.

Or,

His late arrival perfectly hit off with our plan.

Thanks.
  

Top answer

"Hit off" does not mean that. When two people like each other upon first meeting, they have hit it off .

  • "Hit off" does not mean that.
  • When two people like each other upon first meeting, they have hit it off .
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6 Answers
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"Hit off" does not mean that. When two people like each other upon first meeting, they have hit it off.
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Sorry, I forgot to put the source in the first post.
"His late arrival hit off perfectly with our plan."
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hit%20off
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HifaMoSorry, I forgot to put the source in the first post."His late arrival hit off perfectly with our plan."Source
Sorry, but whenever I see the word "free" on the Internet, I close the browser and run a virus scan. I am not going to activate their free trial.

In my dialect, and any dialect I know of, that sentence is nonsense.
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Google the sentence; the result is available.
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HifaMoGoogle the sentence; the result is available.
Thanks. OK, I see it, but it still sounds alien to me. Nobody around here would know what you were talking about, and I've never encountered it in reading.
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enoonThanks. OK, I see it, but it still sounds alien to me.
And to this speaker of BrE.

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