student asking question

Is "of" skipped in front of "me" here?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

Yes it is! Usually, the phrase is "get off of me" but you do not necessarily need "of" in the sentence. "Get off me" means the same thing as "get off of me." It's fairly common for small, filler words to be removed from sentences in English because they are implied. Thank you so much for your question!

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