write-off

write-off — noun

1. a stretch of hours or days during which nothing useful gets done and no progress

1.名詞B2
釋義

a stretch of hours or days during which nothing useful gets done and no progress is made

例句

Monday was a complete write-off because the office had no electricity until noon.

collocation: complete write-off

After catching the flu, Hao considered the whole week a write-off for studying.

informal register: whole week a write-off

同義詞
  • waste

    more general; 'waste of time' is the common phrase

  • lost cause

    can refer to a person or situation, not just a time period

反義詞

文法句型

a write-off

be a write-off

用法筆記

Common in informal spoken English. Often used with 'complete' or 'total' for emphasis. The subject is typically a day, week, meeting, or similar time block.

常見錯誤

The meeting was write-off.
The meeting was a write-off.
💡the noun always requires an article or determiner.
I write-offed the day.
The day was a write-off.
💡write-off is a noun, not a verb; the verb form is separate.

2. a car or other vehicle that has been damaged so severely that repairing it would

2.名詞B2
釋義

a car or other vehicle that has been damaged so severely that repairing it would cost more than buying a new one

例句

After the crash on the motorway, the insurance company declared Christopher's car a total write-off.

collocation: declare something a (total) write-off

The mechanic told Élise that her scooter was a write-off and not worth fixing.

同義詞
  • total loss

    the formal insurance term; more neutral in register

  • wreck

    more general; can describe any severely damaged vehicle, not necessarily an insurance classification

  • scrap

    focuses on the vehicle's value as recycled metal only

文法句型

a write-off

declare something a write-off

用法筆記

A common term in British English for insurance and automotive contexts. In American English, 'totaled' (or 'total loss') is more common. Insurance companies often categorize write-offs into different classes depending on the extent of damage.

常見錯誤

The car was write-off.
The car was a write-off.
💡the article is required.
The car was written-off in the accident.
The car was written off in the accident.
💡the phrasal verb 'write off' is not hyphenated.

3. a person, project, or thing that is considered a complete failure with no chance

3.名詞B2
釋義

a person, project, or thing that is considered a complete failure with no chance of recovery or improvement

例句

The director admitted that the first version of the film was a write-off and refused to release it.

After three failed rounds of funding, the startup was treated as a write-off by most investors.

collocation: treat something as a write-off

同義詞
  • failure

    more direct and common; write-off implies finality and that no further effort is worth investing

  • lost cause

    similar meaning; suggests the outcome is already determined

反義詞

文法句型

a write-off

treat someone/something as a write-off

用法筆記

Extends from the vehicle sense to people and projects. Often carries a dismissive or resigned tone. The phrasal verb 'write someone off' can be used similarly.

4. the formal removal of a debt or worthless asset from a company's financial recor

4.名詞C1
釋義

the formal removal of a debt or worthless asset from a company's financial records because it will never be paid or has no recoverable value

例句

The bank approved a write-off of all unpaid loans from the failed restaurant chain.

collocation: write-off of [debt/loan]

The accountant recorded a write-off for the inventory that had expired in the warehouse.

同義詞
反義詞

文法句型

a write-off

write-off of [something]

用法筆記

Formal accounting term. A write-off reduces taxable income and is recorded as an expense. Distinguish from a 'write-down', which only reduces the recorded value rather than removing it entirely.

常見錯誤

I wrote-off the debt from my personal budget.
The company wrote off the debt from its accounts.
💡personal budgets use different terminology.

5. an amount that a business or individual can legally subtract from their taxable

5.名詞C1
釋義

an amount that a business or individual can legally subtract from their taxable income to reduce the total tax they owe

例句

Gabriela claimed a tax write-off for the new X-ray machine she bought for her dental clinic.

collocation: claim a tax write-off

Donating old office furniture to a registered charity gives the company a useful tax write-off.

同義詞
  • tax deduction

    the formal term; preferred in professional tax contexts

  • tax relief

    broader term; can include credits and allowances

反義詞

文法句型

a write-off

claim something as a write-off

用法筆記

Often called a 'tax write-off' in everyday language. The formal accounting term is 'tax deduction'. Different tax jurisdictions have different rules about what qualifies.

常見錯誤

I can write-off my coffee as a business expense.
I can claim my coffee as a tax deduction if it's for a business meeting.
💡personal expenses are not usually deductible.

write-off — phrasal verb

write-off — verb