buy off on

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English[edit]

Verb[edit]

buy off on (third-person singular simple present buys off on, present participle buying off on, simple past and past participle bought off on)

  1. To consent to.
    • 1981 December 4, “Governors Plead For Aid”, in Bangor Daily News, Bangor ME:
      You've got to understand this is what Stockman is proposing. The president hasn't bought off on it yet.
    • 1988 August 23, “Insurance Plan Gains Local Official's Praise”, in Lawrence Journal-World:
      "I feel very, very encouraged about the plan," she said. "It seems to me that it will be a question of the legislature buying off on the cost of it."
    • 2003 December 18, “Toll on fast lanes takes a step ahead”, in The News Tribune, Tacoma WA:
      Now they have to get the Legislature to buy off on the project and find $14 million to pay for its start-up costs.
    • 2010 July 15, “From Disaster to Catastrophe -- What's Obama's Endgame In the Gulf”, in Fox News:
      Branches have now been established in the parishes for quick assessments and response, but it took weeks to get the Coast Guard to buy off on the idea.