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Academic English #20. pull off — successfully accomplish something

New Hair Institute · 김진오의 뉴헤어 프로젝트 · May 20, 2025

The English expression "pull off" is often used to mean successfully accomplishing something that seems impossible or difficult at first glance. ​ Although it is not formal, it is...

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This page is an English translation of a Korean Naver Blog archive entry. For exact wording and source context, verify against the Korean archive original and the original Naver post.

Clinic: New Hair Institute

Original post date: May 20, 2025

Translated at: April 29, 2026 at 2:33 PM

Medical note: This translation does not guarantee medical accuracy or suitability for treatment decisions.

The English expression "pull off" is often used to mean successfully accomplishing something that seems impossible or difficult at first glance. ​

Although it is not formal, it is also a phrase that speakers and audiences commonly use at U.S. academic conferences and presentations.

For example, when you finish a difficult research project or prepare an impressive presentation in a short amount of time, the expression "pull off" naturally comes up.

Academic English #20. pull off — successfully accomplish something image 1

5 example sentences

  1. I can’t believe he pulled off that presentation so smoothly.

  2. She pulled it off by answering every question in just five minutes. Impressive.

  3. Pulling off that tight deadline felt like a miracle.

  4. The team really pulled off getting this technique into clinical practice.

  5. He looked unprepared, but somehow pulled off a great talk.

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