Depart in a sentence as a verb

I covered 200% more departments than I was hired for.

At the end of two years you either pay the same $100,000, apply through other means, or depart.

Ms. Ortiz on the other hand, could be asked to depart at any point.

I'd rather live it in a way that when the time comes for me to depart, I can take my last breath and say: "Would do it again.

In so far as you depart from this course, you become dampers, mutes, and hooded executioners.

Either way, it soured my faith in the company some, and with a bunch of other factors led me to depart from the company.

Got a bit annoyed about this, because Douglas was about to depart on a speaking tour of the US, and C. was responsible for ensuring his laptop worked.

If you try to depart from the scrapy-way then scrapy suddenly feels very "frameworkish" and limiting.

Is that right?It's always interesting to see how real-world circuits depart from the purely digital, RTL ideal in order to save some resource.

If all goes well, next summer the 65-foot-wide craft will depart Vesta and head toward the largest asteroid in the solar system, Ceres, with arrival scheduled for 2015.

And instead of those who betrayed them being brought to justice, they instead depart to the West where they are greeted with applause by those who mistake cunningness with intelligence.

I'm pretty good about making my happiness unknown, and giving organizations months and months to respond before I finally depart.

We find that in two recent periods, Libor rates depart significantly from the expected Benford reference distribution.

The point is to remove our personal biases from interpretation of "just".But if the sovereign jurisdiction won't allow this guy to fire someone who has done this, then its "law" has departed from its proper functions and can't be relied upon.

Depart definitions

verb

move away from a place into another direction; "Go away before I start to cry"; "The train departs at noon"

verb

be at variance with; be out of line with

See also: deviate vary diverge

verb

leave; "The family took off for Florida"

See also: part start

verb

go away or leave

See also: quit

verb

remove oneself from an association with or participation in; "She wants to leave"; "The teenager left home"; "She left her position with the Red Cross"; "He left the Senate after two terms"; "after 20 years with the same company, she pulled up stakes"

See also: leave

verb

wander from a direct or straight course

See also: sidetrack digress straggle