To divide; separate into parts; dispart.To separate; sunder; dispart.[At the Savoy Conference (1661) the use of the word depart in the marriage service was objected to by the Nonconformist divines. It was therefore changed (in 1662) to do part, us in the present prayer-book.]To depart from; quit; leave (by ellipsis of the usual from).To share; give or take a part or share.To separate into parts; become divided.To separate from a place or a person; go a different way; part.To go or move away; withdraw, as from a place, a person, etc.To deviate; go back or away, as from a course or principle of action, authoritative instructions, etc.; desist.In law, to deviate in a subsequent pleading from the title or defense in the previous pleading.To die; decease; leave this world.n. Division; separation, as of a compound substance into its elements: as, “water of depart,”n. The act of going away; departure.n. n. Death.An abbreviation of department.