1 If the amount, number, or quality of something drops off, it becomes less:
4 a reduction in the amount or level of something:
Analysts say the employment drop-off is directly linked to a slowdown in housing construction
a drop-off in sth There was a sharp drop-off in industrial production in December.
a slight/steep/significant drop-off
5 an act of taking people, goods, mail, etc. to a place, or the place where you take them:
There is a special protected drop-off lane on the eastbound side.
The result of this last process is a gradual drop-off in reaction time and error rate.
It is also the drop-off point for buses before the vehicle ramp descends into the car park.
Setting a limit on the number of concurrent connections would help to flatten the graph after the drop-off point.
This screen incorporates controlled doors for the ambulance drop-off into the waiting area.
The most northern reaches of the region experienced the highest drop-off.
These interval estimates are more appealing than those found with ad-hoc methods, such as the ' lod drop-off ' in maximum likelihood.
The rate of intensity drop-off is a function of the intensity of the pulse.
中文繁体
睡覺, 入睡, 下降…
More中文简体
睡觉, 入睡, 下降…
MoreEspañol
dejar…
MoreTürk dili
içi geçmek, uyuya kalmak, (miktarı…
MoreFrançais
déposer, se détacher, s’endormir…
MoreČeština
uvolnit se, upadnout, usnout…
MoreDansk
falde af, falde i søvn, sætte af…
MoreIndonesia
terlepas, tertidur, menurunkan…
More