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ESL forum > Ask for help > Native speakers help is needed    

Native speakers help is needed



omfp
Portugal

Native speakers help is needed
 
Hello!
 
Could you help me this with this sentence: "But when something comes up that may make my plans go off schedule it stresses me out a bit." Is this sentence correct?
My main problem is the expression "go off schedule". I �ve already looked it up in the dictionaries, but I can �t find anything. Does this expression exist? If yes, what �s its meaning?
 
Thanks in advance.
 
Dina

29 May 2012      





Jayho
Australia

Hi Dina
 
The commonly used expression is: not + going according to schedule
 
Although I don �t hear it expressed as go off schedule, it sounds perfectly ok to me in the above context and I immediately understood it to mean the same.  I googled it and found it only twice - which suprises me - so maybe it isn �t commonly used.
 
I �m interested to hear what other NS say.
 
Cheers
 
Jayho

29 May 2012     



yanogator
United States

I �d say that it is more common for a person to go off schedule than for plans to do it, but it sounds natural to me (with a comma after schedule in your sentence, of course).
 
 
Bruce

29 May 2012     



cunliffe
United Kingdom

It sounds fine to me.

29 May 2012     



GIOVANNI
Canada

We also use not going according to schedule.  As in,  "again my plans are not going according to schedule".  I �ve also heard people use "the train went off schedule several times this week"

29 May 2012     



mariamit
Greece

I agree with Bruce. We usually say a person goes off schedule but it doesn �t sound wrong. Of course I prefer according to schedule, also.

29 May 2012