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HOME | Definition of departure (DEPARTURE, Departure)


    Departure \De*par"ture\ (?; 135), n. [From Depart.]
    1. Division; separation; putting away. [Obs.]
    [1913 Webster]

    No other remedy . . . but absolute departure.
    --Milton.
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    2. Separation or removal from a place; the act or process of
    departing or going away.
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    Departure from this happy place. --Milton.
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    3. Removal from the present life; death; decease.
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    The time of my departure is at hand. --2 Tim. iv.
    6.
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    His timely departure . . . barred him from the
    knowledge of his son's miseries. --Sir P.
    Sidney.
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    4. Deviation or abandonment, as from or of a rule or course
    of action, a plan, or a purpose.
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    Any departure from a national standard. --Prescott.
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    5. (Law) The desertion by a party to any pleading of the
    ground taken by him in his last antecedent pleading, and
    the adoption of another. --Bouvier.
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    6. (Nav. & Surv.) The distance due east or west which a
    person or ship passes over in going along an oblique line.
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    Note: Since the meridians sensibly converge, the departure in
    navigation is not measured from the beginning nor from
    the end of the ship's course, but is regarded as the
    total easting or westing made by the ship or person as
    he travels over the course.
    [1913 Webster]

    To take a departure (Nav. & Surv.), to ascertain, usually
    by taking bearings from a landmark, the position of a
    vessel at the beginning of a voyage as a point from which
    to begin her dead reckoning; as, the ship took her
    departure from Sandy Hook.

    Syn: Death; demise; release. See Death.
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    departure
    n 1: act of departing [syn: going, going away, leaving]
    2: a variation that deviates from the standard or norm; "the
    deviation from the mean" [syn: deviation, divergence,
    difference]
    3: euphemistic expressions for death; "thousands mourned his
    passing" [syn: passing, loss, exit, expiration, going,
    release]

    WordNet (r) 2.0


    226 Moby Thesaurus words for "departure":
    AWOL, French leave, aberrancy, aberration, abscondence, absence,
    absence without leave, absentation, absenteeism, absenting,
    annihilation, bane, bend, bias, biological death, blackout,
    blocking, branching off, bypath, byway, cessation of life,
    circuitousness, clinical death, contrariety, contrast, corner,
    crook, crossing the bar, curtains, curve, cut, day off, death,
    death knell, debt of nature, decampment, decease, declination,
    default, deflection, dematerialization, demise, detour, deviance,
    deviancy, deviation, deviousness, difference, digression,
    disaccord, disaccordance, disagreement, disappearance,
    disappearing, disconformity, discongruity, discordance,
    discrepancy, discreteness, discursion, disparity, dispersion,
    dissent, dissimilarity, dissipation, dissolution, dissolving,
    dissonance, distinction, distinctness, divagation, divarication,
    divergence, divergency, diversion, diversity, dogleg, doom, double,
    drift, drifting, dying, ebb of life, eclipse, egress, egression,
    elimination, end, end of life, ending, episode, erasure, errantry,
    escape, eternal rest, evanescence, evaporation, excursion,
    excursus, excused absence, exit, exodus, exorbitation, expiration,
    extinction, extinguishment, extraction, fadeaway, fadeout, fading,
    far cry, farewell, final summons, finger of death, fleeing, flight,
    forthcoming, furlough, going, going off, going out, grave, hairpin,
    hand of death, heterogeneity, holiday, hooky, inaccordance,
    incompatibility, incongruity, inconsistency, inconsonance,
    indirection, inequality, inharmoniousness, inharmony,
    irreconcilability, jaws of death, knell, last debt, last muster,
    last rest, last roundup, last sleep, leave, leave of absence,
    leave-taking, leaving, leaving life, loss of life, making an end,
    melting, mixture, nonappearance, nonattendance, nonconformity,
    obliquity, occultation, odds, opposition, otherness, outcome,
    outcoming, outgo, outgoing, parting, passing, passing away,
    passing over, pererration, perishing, quietus, rambling, release,
    rest, retreat, reward, running away, sabbatical leave,
    sentence of death, separateness, shades of death, shadow of death,
    sheer, shift, shifting, shifting course, shifting path, sick leave,
    side path, side road, sidetrack, skew, slant, sleep, somatic death,
    straying, summons of death, sweep, swerve, swerving, swinging,
    tack, truancy, truantism, turn, turning, twist, unconformity,
    unexcused absence, unlikeness, unorthodoxy, vacation, vanishing,
    vanishing point, variance, variation, variegation, variety, veer,
    wandering, warp, wipe, withdrawal, yaw, zigzag

    Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0


    DEPARTURE, pleading. Said to be when a party quits or departs from the case,
    or defence, which he has first made, and has recourse to another; it is when
    his replication or rejoinder contains matter not pursuant to the
    declaration, or plea, and which does not support and fortify it. Co. Litt.
    304, a; 2 Saund. 84, a, n. (1); 2 Wils. 98; 1 Chit. Pl. 619. The following
    example will illustrate what is a departure: if to assumpsit, the defendant
    plead infancy, and to a replication of necessaries, rejoin, duress, payment,
    release, &c., the rejoinder is a departure, and a good cause of demurrer,
    because the defendant quits or departs from the case or defence which he
    first made, though either of these matters, newly pleaded, would have been a
    good bar, if first pleaded as such.
    2. A departure in pleading is never allowed, for the record would, by
    such means, be spun out into endless prolixity; for he who has departed from
    and relinquished his first plea, might resort to a second, third, fourth, or
    even fortieth defence; pleading would, by such means, become infinite. He
    who had a bad cause, would never be brought to issue, and he who had a good
    one, would never obtain the end of his suit. Summary on Pleading, 92; 2
    Saund. 84, a. n. (l); 16 East, R. 39; 1 M. & S. 395 Coin. Dig. Pleader, F 7,
    11; Bac. Abr. Pleas, L; Vin. Abr. Departure; 1 Archb. Civ. Pl. 247, 253; 1
    Chit. Pl. 618.
    3. A departure is cured by a verdict in favor of him who makes it, if
    the matter pleaded by way of departure is a sufficient answer, in substance,
    to what is before pleaded by the opposite party; that is, if it would have
    been sufficient, if pleaded in the first instance. 2 Saund. 84 1 Lill. Ab.
    444.

    Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)


    DEPARTURE, maritime law. A deviation from the course of the voyage insured.
    2. A departure is justifiable or not justifiable it is justifiable ill
    consequence of the stress of weather, to make necessary repairs, to succor a
    ship in distress, to avoid capture, of inability to navigate the ship,
    mutiny of the crew, or other compulsion. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 1189.

    Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)




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