See also: off-site

English edit

Etymology edit

off- +‎ site

Adjective edit

offsite (not comparable)

  1. Away from a main location; in a place not owned by a particular organisation.
    • 2009 February 1, David Kaufman, “Airport Hotels That Invite Lingering”, in New York Times[1]:
      At nearly all Aloft properties, for instance, the chain has introduced lower-cost dishes — pulled pork burritos, pesto pizzas, Asian sesame noodles, for example — priced at $4 to $12 as guests begin to shy away from pricey offsite restaurants.

Adverb edit

offsite (not comparable)

  1. Away from a particular site.
    • 2024 January 24, Peter Plisner, “Rising to the University challenge”, in RAIL, number 1001, pages 60-61:
      Several overnight weekend possessions were required to crane in new bridges and various other parts of the buildings which were manufactured offsite.

Noun edit

offsite (plural offsites)

  1. A group outing or meeting that takes place outside of the office.
    They went bowling for their team offsite.

Anagrams edit