De*par"ture (?; 135), n.
[From Depart.]
1. Division; separation; putting away. [Obs.]
No other remedy . . . but absolute departure.
Milton.
2. Separation or removal from a place;
the act or process of departing or going away.
Departure from this happy place.
Milton.
3. Removal from the present life; death; decease.
The time of my departure is at hand.
2 Tim. iv.
6. His timely departure . .
. barred him from the knowledge of his son's miseries.
Sir P. Sidney. 4. Deviation or abandonment, as from or of a rule or course of action, a plan, or a purpose.
Any departure from a national standard.
Prescott.
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.
6. (Nav. & Surv.) The
distance due east or west
which a person or ship passes over in going along an oblique line.
&fist; 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.
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.