Concept cluster: Activities > Departure
n
A farewell, a goodbye; especially a fond farewell, or a lasting or permanent farewell.
v
(intransitive, obsolete) To depart.
adj
(archaic or dialectal) Nearly gone; dead (used in Devonshire at the turn of the 19th century)
adv
(as imperative, by ellipsis) Come away; go away; take away.
n
The acknowledgement of a departure that one is not happy about.
v
(rare, humoristic or faux-archaic) To go away, to disappear.
v
To do something that is not normally allowed but is also not explicitly prohibited.
n
(rare, India) Movement away; loss.
v
(idiomatic) To be last in a moving line of people, to walk or go behind others in a line.
adv
Aside, away.
adj
Out of the way; remote.
n
(colloquial, often childish) A goodbye.
n
Alternative spelling of charge off [A write-off.]
v
(intransitive) To behave in creative or unconventional ways, to break the rules.
v
To repeatedly appear and disappear; to be transient
n
(in the plural) The activities of a specified person or group
adj
Having gone away.
n
One who has departed from a place or group.
n
One who departs.
n
(obsolete) Act of departing; departure.
n
The act of departing or something that has departed.
adj
Granting permission to depart.
v
(transitive) To leave at a distance; to outpace, leave behind.
n
Obsolete form of escapade. [A daring or adventurous act; an undertaking which goes against convention.]
n
(idiomatic) An orderly and uneventful departure, timed so as not to detract or distract.
v
(intransitive) To be progressively below average in performance.
adv
Alternative spelling of fare thee well
n
A departure; the act of leaving
n
Someone who bids farewell.
v
To do or attempt something outside one's typical area of expertise.
n
The act of one who forestalls.
n
(obsolete) Departure.
n
A passing away; decease; death; departure.
v
(obsolete) To fetch forth.
adj
Going out or forth; departing.
n
A sudden or unannounced departure, or one taken without permission.
v
(idiomatic) To become obsolete or outmoded.
adv
(idiomatic, of a race) Ahead of the competitors and still increasing the lead.
adj
Away, having left.
n
Alternative form of goodbye [An utterance of goodbye, the wishing of farewell to someone.]
n
(rare) A person who says good-bye.
v
To say goodbye; to wish somebody farewell on parting.
n
A period of time when someone is unavailable for work.
n
(dated) Farewell, departure.
v
(transitive, idiomatic) To outdo; to progress faster than (someone or something else).
n
The process of saying goodbye.
n
alternative spelling of leave-taking [The process of saying goodbye.]
n
(colloquial, Ireland) A party or other celebration held in honour of someone leaving their job. i.e, are you going to Josh's leaving do?
n
An item that was left behind when someone departed.
v
(of a clock) to go slow and not keep accurate time.
v
(obsolete, intransitive) To depart, leave; to make off.
n
(idiomatic) A situation in which progress is more than offset by adverse developments.
adj
(not comparable) Going out, on its way out.
adj
Discontinued; ended or concluded.
adj
Fully completed and put aside.
n
A farewell, the act of departing politely.
n
A final attack or insult by a departing enemy.
n
A standard formula to part from a conversation.
n
(obsolete) departure
adj
(Hawaii) done; over; finished
n
An utterance of sayonara, the wishing of farewell to someone.
v
To evacuate a place by one's own decision, without assistance, or unaided.
n
an outset
n
A break from the expected activity, for rest, for strategic reasons, or because participation is impossible.
v
To be formally, but not actually, equal under the law, due to circumstances being ignored.
n
well-gone
v
(intransitive, idiomatic) To go about something slowly and carefully or at one's own pace.
adj
Having lost a job or assignment.
adj
Synonym of far gone (“at an advanced stage of decline, disability, or alteration”)
v
(intransitive, colloquial) To get out of bed; get up.
adv
Aside or away, so as no longer to be present or in use.
n
The act of parting company.
n
A want-away person or organisation
n
Alternative spelling of want-away [A want-away person or organisation]
adj
Going away; departing.
adj
Going away; departing; of or relating to one who goes away.
v
(obsolete or poetic) To go, go away, depart, perish, vanish
v
(transitive, archaic or formal) To go against; oppose; transgress.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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