depart

US: /dɪˈpɑɹt/
UK: /dɪpˈɑːt/


English Vietnamese dictionary


depart /di'pɑ:t/
  • nội động từ
    • rời khỏi, ra đi, khởi hành
      • the train will depart at 6: xe lửa sẽ khởi hành lúc 6 giờ
    • chết
      • to depart from life: chết, từ trần, từ giã cõi đời
    • sao lãng; đi trệch, lạc (đề)
      • to depart from a duty: sao lãng nhiệm vụ
      • to depart from a subject: lạc đề
      • to depart from one's promise (words): không giữ lời hứa
    • (thơ ca); (từ cổ,nghĩa cổ) rời khỏi, cáo biệt, ra về
      • the guests were departing: khách khứa đang ra về
  • ngoại động từ
    • từ giã (cõi đời)
      • to depart this life: từ giã cõi đời này

Advanced English dictionary


+ verb (rather formal)
1 ~ (for ...) (from ...) to leave a place, especially to start a trip: [V] Flights for Amsterdam depart from Terminal 3. + She waited until the last of the guests had departed. + [VN] (AmE) The train departed Amritsar at 6.15 p.m.
2 (AmE) to leave your job: [V] the departing president + [VN] He departed his job December 16.
See also - DEPARTURE
Idioms: depart this life to die. People say 'depart this life' to avoid saying 'die'.
Phrasal Verbs: depart from sth to behave in a way that is different from usual: Departing from her usual routine, she took the bus to work.

Thesaurus dictionary


v.
1 go, go away or out or from or off, leave, quit, retire (from), retreat (from), withdraw (from), exit (from), set out or forth or off, decamp, abscond, fly, cut and run, skip (out), run off or away or out, take to the road, take one's leave, check out, disappear, vanish, evaporate, Jocular toddle off, Imperative Begone!, Colloq beat it, scram, shove off, make oneself scarce, Brit scarper, US hit the road, be out of (someplace), Slang split, Imperative get lost, US cut (on) out, vamoose, take a (run-out) powder, lam (on) out, take it on the lam, Brit do a moonlight flit, Usually imperative bugger off, buzz off, Taboo, imperative fuck off:
Our bags are packed and we depart at noon.
2 Often, depart from. deviate (from), change, diverge (from), turn (aside or away) (from), differ (from), vary (from), break away (from), leave, abandon, stray (from), veer (from):
She refused to depart from established practices.

Collocation dictionary


VERB + DEPART

be due to, be scheduled to
The plane was scheduled to depart at 8.30.
| be waiting to | prepare to
They shook hands all round and prepared to depart.

PREP.

for
He departs for New York tomorrow morning.
| from
We depart from Heathrow at ten o'clock tonight.


Concise English dictionary


departs|departed|departingdɪ'pɑːt
verb
+move away from a place into another direction
+be at variance with; be out of line with
+leave
+go away or leave
+remove oneself from an association with or participation in
+wander from a direct or straight course