off-centre
English
editPronunciation
edit- Rhymes: -ɛntə(ɹ)
Adjective
editoff-centre (comparative more off-centre, superlative most off-centre)
- (British spelling, Canadian spelling, Irish, South African, Australian and New Zealand) displaced from the centre
- Place the decorations off-centre on the table.
- eccentric, unbalanced, slightly wrong
- Every time I see him, he acts a bit off-centre.
- 1987 May 9, Michael Bronski, “Prick Up Your Marriage”, in Gay Community News, page 6:
- While Lahr's book was meticulously researched, the author had such deeply ambivalent feelings about Orton's relationship with Halliwwell (and probably with all gay relationships) that the book felt off-center.