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1 depart
1. intransitive verb1) (go away, take one's leave) weggehen; fortgehen3) (fig.): (deviate)2. transitive verb(literary)depart this life/world — aus dem Leben/aus dieser Welt scheiden (geh.)
* * *1) (to go away: The tour departed from the station at 9 a.m.) abgehen, ab-/wegfahren2) ((with from) to cease to follow (a course of action): We departed from our original plan.) abkommen von•- academic.ru/19645/departure">departure* * *de·part[dɪˈpɑ:t, AM -ˈpɑ:rt]I. vi2. (differ)to \depart from normal practice von der üblichen Verfahrensweise abweichenII. vtto \depart this life [or earth] aus diesem Leben scheiden* * *[dɪ'pAːt]1. vi1) (= go away) weggehen; (on journey) abreisen; (by bus, car etc) wegfahren; (train, bus etc) abfahrenhe departs for Rome tomorrow morning — er reist morgen früh nach Rom ab
the bus departs from the bus station — der Bus fährt vom or am Busbahnhof ab
the train at platform 6 departing for... — der Zug auf Bahnsteig 6 nach...
guests are asked to sign the register before they depart — Gäste werden gebeten, vor der Abreise einen Meldezettel auszufüllen
to be ready to depart (person) — start- or abfahrbereit sein
the visitors were about to depart —
to depart on one's way (liter, old) — sich aufmachen, aufbrechen
2) (= deviate from opinion etc) abweichen (from von)2. vt1) (train, bus etc) abfahren aus2) (liter)* * *depart [dıˈpɑː(r)t]A v/ifor nach)2. BAHN etc abgehen, abfahren, FLUG abfliegendepart from one’s word sein Wort brechen4. hinscheiden, verscheiden:depart from life aus dem Leben scheiden5. JUR vom Gegenstand der Klage abweichenB v/t verlassen (obs außer in):depart this life sterben* * *1. intransitive verb1) (go away, take one's leave) weggehen; fortgehen2) (set out, start, leave) abfahren; [Flugzeug:] abfliegen; (on one's journey) abreisen3) (fig.): (deviate)2. transitive verbdepart this life/world — aus dem Leben/aus dieser Welt scheiden (geh.)
* * *v.abfahren v.abreisen v. -
2 depart
[dɪ'pɑːt]1) form. partire2) (deviate)to depart from — allontanarsi da [position, truth]; abbandonare [ practice]
* * *1) (to go away: The tour departed from the station at 9 a.m.) partire2) ((with from) to cease to follow (a course of action): We departed from our original plan.) allontanarsi da•* * *[dɪ'pɑːt]1) form. partire2) (deviate)to depart from — allontanarsi da [position, truth]; abbandonare [ practice]
См. также в других словарях:
depart from one's course — index detour, deviate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
deviate — I verb aberrare, alter course, angle off, be at variance, be different, be distinguished from, be oblique, bear no resemblance, bear off, branch out, break bounds, break the pattern, change direction, clash, clash with, conflict with, contrast,… … Law dictionary
deviate — I. verb ( ated; ating) Etymology: Late Latin deviatus, past participle of deviare, from Latin de + via way more at way Date: circa 1633 intransitive verb 1. to stray especially from a standard, principle, or topic 2. to depart from an established … New Collegiate Dictionary
deviate from the truth — I verb alter one s course, deceive, depart from a norm, digress, diverge, drift, fabricate, fake, go astray, lie, maunder, meander, mislead, misrepresent, misstate, prevaricate, skew, stray, struggle, swerve, take a different course, wander II… … Law dictionary
deviate — I (Roget s IV) v. Syn. deflect, digress, swerve, shy, vary, wander, stray, turn aside, veer, bear off, go out of control, divagate, depart from, break the pattern, go amiss, err, angle away, angle off, diverge, leave the beaten path, not conform … English dictionary for students
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detour — I noun alternate route, by pass, by passage, circuitous route, deflection, departure, deviation, deviation from a direct course, digression, diversion, excursion, indirect path, loop, roundabout course, temporary route, wrong course associated… … Law dictionary
swerve — swerve, veer, deviate, depart, digress, diverge mean to turn aside from a straight line or a defined course. Swerve may refer to a turning aside, usually somewhat abruptly, by a person or material thing {at that point the road swerves to the… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
swerve — verb (swerved; swerving) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English sweorfan to wipe, file away; akin to Old High German swerban to wipe off, Welsh chwerfu to whirl Date: 14th century intransitive verb to turn aside abruptly from a straight line … New Collegiate Dictionary
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United States — a republic in the N Western Hemisphere comprising 48 conterminous states, the District of Columbia, and Alaska in North America, and Hawaii in the N Pacific. 267,954,767; conterminous United States, 3,022,387 sq. mi. (7,827,982 sq. km); with… … Universalium