1. (Intrans.) S'en aller.
2. (Intrans.) Filer.
3. (Intrans.) Disparaître. Partir de bonne heure.
4. Démarrer. Faire partir un moteur.
5. Commencer. Le voyage part d'ici.
1. To go away or leave; SYN. take leave, quit.
2. To leave; SYN. part, start, start out, set forth, set off, set out, take off.
1. To get on; to make progress, as in business.
2. To proceed; to advance; to prosper.
3. When you are able to do some sort of work without any serious problems, you get along.
1. When you leave a place or leave a person, you go away.
2. When a condition, problem, situation, or activity disappears or greatly decreases, it goes away.
1. To be discharged or activated
2. To happen in a particular manner; SYN. come off, go over.
3. To stop running, functioning, or operating, as of power.
4. When a gun goes off, it fires. When a bomb goes off, it explodes. When an alarm or alarm clock goes off, it makes a loud noise.
5. When an electrical device or system goes off, it stops operating. Come on is the opposite of go off.
6. When an event or plan goes off well, smoothly, without a problem, or without a hitch (a hitch is a problem), it happens as planned.
7. When a road, trail, path, and so on, goes off, it leaves the main road, trail, or path, and goes in a different direction.
(Irregular preterit, past participle: left).
1. To be survived by after one's death; SYN. leave behind.
2. To cause to be in a specified state.
3. To go away from a place; SYN. go forth, go away.
4. To have left or have as a remainder.
5. To leave behind.
6. To leave home, school, a position, etc.; SYN. depart.
7. To leave unchanged or unaltered.
8. To let be; leave alone or undisturbed; SYN. let.
9. To make a possibility or provide opportunity for; SYN. allow for, allow, provide for.
10. To refrain from taking; SYN. leave behind.
11. To result in; SYN. result, lead.
1. To be broken or divided into parts or pieces; to break; to become separated
2. To give up or give away; to relinquish a connection of any kind; -- followed by with or from
3. To go away; to depart; to take leave; to quit each other.
To set in motion or cause to begin
1. To mimic or imitate, esp. in an amusing or satirical manner
2. To prove fatal
3. To remove clothes
4. To take away or remove,
5. To take off from the ground, as of an aircraft or balloon; SYN. lift off.
6. To take time off from work; stop working temporarily; SYN. take time off.
When an airplane leaves the ground and flies up into the air, it takes off.
When a business or other organized activity becomes very successful, it takes off.