play off
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]play off (third-person singular simple present plays off, present participle playing off, simple past and past participle played off)
- (transitive, often with as) To portray (something) (as unimportant); to dismiss or make light of (a factor in a situation, or one's embarrassment about it); to pretend not to be embarrassed, upset, impressed, or otherwise affected by (it).
- Coordinate terms: laugh away, laugh off, style it out
- After tripping, Sara tried to play her embarrassment off by laughing with everyone else.
- Although he's obviously hung over, he's trying to play it off as food poisoning.
- (transitive) To set (other people) against one another: to induce competition between them, especially in a covert way so that they do not realize the degree to which they have been played (manipulated).
- Stalin's propensity to play off his subordinates against one another is a well-studied theme.
- (sports, intransitive, transitive) To compete in a play-off; to compete against (an opponent) in a play-off.
- (dated, transitive) To display; to show; to put in exercise.
- to play off tricks