depart+quickly

  • 1Time to Depart — infobox Book | name = Time to Depart orig title = translator = author = Lindsey Davis cover artist = country = United Kingdom language = English series = Marcus Didius Falco genre = Crime publisher = Century, Mysterious Press release date = 1995… …

    Wikipedia

  • 2Skedaddle — depart quickly …

    Dictionary of Australian slang

  • 3shoot off —  Depart quickly …

    A concise dictionary of English slang

  • 4dash off — depart quickly, leave hastily; write quickly, jot down …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 5run — runnable, adj. runnability, n. /run/, v., ran, run, running, n., adj. v.i. 1. to go quickly by moving the legs more rapidly than at a walk and in such a manner that for an instant in each step all or both feet are off the ground. 2. to move with… …

    Universalium

  • 6run — I [[t]rʌn[/t]] v. ran, run, run•ning, n. adj. 1) to go quickly by moving the legs more rapidly than at a walk and in such a manner that for an instant in each step all or both feet are off the ground 2) to move or pass quickly 3) to depart… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 7abscond — ab·scond /ab skänd, əb / vi: to depart secretly: withdraw and hide oneself; specif: to evade the legal process of a court by hiding within or secretly leaving its jurisdiction abscond ed with the funds abscond from New York abscond to Canada… …

    Law dictionary

  • 8duck out — verb a) To depart quickly or exit abruptly, especially in a manner which does not attract notice and before a meeting, event, etc. has concluded. Wile they was still talking along these lines, the orchestra begin to drool a Perfect Day, so I… …

    Wiktionary

  • 9bride's nightie — be off like a bride s nightie Depart quickly, move with a sudden burst of speed. It is likely that this expression was first used in horseracing to refer to a horse that moved very quickly out of the starting gates. The phrase plays on two… …

    Australian idioms

  • 10vamoose — Vamose Va*mose , v. i. & t. [Sp. vamos let us go.] To depart quickly; to depart from. [Written also {vamos}, and {vamoose}.] [Slang, Eng. & U. S.] [1913 Webster] …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English