DEPARTURE
\dɪpˈɑːt͡ʃə], \dɪpˈɑːtʃə], \d_ɪ_p_ˈɑː_tʃ_ə]\
Definitions of DEPARTURE
- 2010 - New Age Dictionary Database
- 1913 - Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
- 1919 - The Winston Simplified Dictionary
- 1899 - The american dictionary of the english language.
- 1894 - The Clarendon dictionary
- 1919 - The Concise Standard Dictionary of the English Language
- 1914 - Nuttall's Standard dictionary of the English language
- 1874 - Etymological and pronouncing dictionary of the English language
- 1871 - The Cabinet Dictionary of the English Language
- 1790 - A Complete Dictionary of the English Language
Sort: Oldest first
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Separation or removal from a place; the act or process of departing or going away.
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Removal from the present life; death; decease.
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Deviation or abandonment, as from or of a rule or course of action, a plan, or a purpose.
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The desertion by a party to any pleading of the ground taken by him in his last antecedent pleading, and the adoption of another.
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Of or pert. to a going business or concern; as, the going value of a company.
By Oddity Software
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Separation or removal from a place; the act or process of departing or going away.
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Removal from the present life; death; decease.
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Deviation or abandonment, as from or of a rule or course of action, a plan, or a purpose.
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The desertion by a party to any pleading of the ground taken by him in his last antecedent pleading, and the adoption of another.
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Of or pert. to a going business or concern; as, the going value of a company.
By Noah Webster.
By William Dodge Lewis, Edgar Arthur Singer
By Daniel Lyons
By William Hand Browne, Samuel Stehman Haldeman
By James Champlin Fernald
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The act of departing; death; abandonment; abandonment of defence in pleading; the distance a ship has gone to the east or west of the meridian from which she departed.
By Nuttall, P.Austin.
By Stormonth, James, Phelp, P. H.
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n. Act of going away; setting out; removal from a place;- death;—decease;—deviation or abandonment, as of a rule of duty, of an action or of a plan or purpose;—the distance east or west, as of a ship or the end of a course, from the particular meridian from which the vessel or course departs.