- Abscond
- Depart quickly
- Ed turned on kids’ holiday programme to abscond
- Flee
- Make off secretly
- Move from home
- Move out sneakily
- Move from home
- Pull out of the ground
- Remove a plant completely
- Rip out
- Weed out
- To root up; to tear up by the roots, or as if by the
roots; to remove utterly; to eradicate; to extirpate.
- A general overseas
- Away from home
- Away on a world trip
- Degree put back before making way overseas
- On the loose
- Over there
- Overseas
- Cast out
- Dispossess by law
- Eject
- Eject (tenant)
- Eject from home
- Eject from home in heartless, evil act
- Eject from house
- Appear
- Appear mid-scene to mix
- Become prominent
- Come Forth
- Come into view
- Come into view as an Eastern blend
- Come out of hiding in emergency
- Evacuate without European Union
- Leave empty
- Leave or quit
- Leave, cause to become empty
- Move out from
- Quit (premises)
- To empty
- A meadow away from home
- Astray
- Away from home
- Away from the point
- Distant, far ...
- Off the subject
- Off-course
- Game controller (abb)
- one who works from home
- Become involved
- Intervene
- Move at home to intervene
- Emit
- Outflow
- Release, allow to go
- Send home (from hospital, say)
- To relieve of a charge, load, or burden; to empty of
a load or cargo; to unburden; to unload; as, to discharge a vessel.
- To free of the missile with which anything is charged
or loaded; to let go the charge of; as, to discharge a bow, catapult,
etc.; especially, said of firearms, -- to fire off; to shoot off; also,
to relieve from a state of tension, as a Leyden jar.
- To of something weighing upon or impeding over one,
as a debt, claim, obligation, responsibility, accusation, etc.; to
absolve; to acquit; to clear.