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offing - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From off +‎ ing. Attested since the 1620s. Early texts also spell the term offin and offen.

offing (plural offings)

  1. (nautical) The area of the sea in which a ship can be seen in the distance from land, excluding the parts nearest the shore, and beyond the anchoring ground.
    to see (a ship) in the offing
  2. (nautical) The distance that a ship at sea keeps away from land, often because of navigational dangers, fog and other hazards; a position at a distance from shore.
    • 1768–1771, James Cook, chapter 8, in Captain Cook's Journal, First Voyage, published 1893:

      However, what with the help of this Ebb, and our Boats, we by Noon had got an Offing of 1 1/2 or 2 Miles, yet we could hardly flatter ourselves with hopes of getting Clear []

    • 1846, Frederick Marryat, The Privateersman, chapter 2:

      We beat off shore during the whole of the night, when the weather moderated, and at daybreak we found out that we had not gained much offing, in consequence of the current []

  3. (figuratively) The foreseeable future. Chiefly in the phrase in the offing.
  • (nautical range of sight): ken

offing

  1. present participle and gerund of off