0 a product that develops from another more important product: --
The stage show is a spin-off from a television programme.
The research has had spin-offs in the development of medical equipment.
1 a new business created by separating part of a company, or the act of creating such a business: --
Moreover, there is a spin-off from that situation.
If we are setting out to help agriculture, there is not necessarily a wider spin-off to the countryside.
The first is that it encourages private investment, which will have a beneficial spin-off effect for public provision of housing—let no one underestimate that.
The private sector would have 5,000 in manufacturing, which would be a spin-off from that investment and there would be 3,000 in the service sector.
There is an important amount of spin-off from the present naval shipbuilding programme.
Once it became clear that the vaccines aged, the extension of the market abroad implied the delocalization of production and a policy in favor of spin-off laboratories.
Another rewarding spin-off from this project was the chance to give the first analytical account of the vegetation of ant heaps, which were abundant at our study site.
We note one spin-off of the above proof for later use.