A phonetic spelling of "get off," rendered in thick regional British dialect — the kind of thing you'd hear shouted across a field or a pub. It captures the flat vowels and dropped letters of dialects like Yorkshire or East Midlands. Used to tell someone to back off, stop touching something, or express disbelief, just like its standard English counterpart but with a lot more regional flavour packed into the spelling.
Geddoff my chips, I told you they were mine!
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(dialect, slang) Get off.
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Regional slang from around the English-speaking world — British, Australian, Irish, Caribbean, Nigerian, Filipino, AAVE, and the hyphenated-English dialects that make the internet sound local.
See all Regional & Other slang on Slangora.