take leave
11take leave of someone — old fashioned phrase to say goodbye to someone Thesaurus: goodbyes and to say goodbyehyponym ways of saying hellosynonym Main entry: leave * * * take leave of someone (or …
12take leave of one's senses — {v. phr.} To go mad; become crazy. * / Have you taken leave of your senses? Jake cried, when he saw Andy swallow a live goldfish./ …
13take leave of one's senses — {v. phr.} To go mad; become crazy. * / Have you taken leave of your senses? Jake cried, when he saw Andy swallow a live goldfish./ …
14take leave of one's senses — To become irrational • • • Main Entry: ↑leave take leave of one s senses To go mad, start behaving unreasonably or irrationally • • • Main Entry: ↑sense * * * I see sense II (in hyperbo …
15take leave of your senses — take leave of (your) senses to become crazy. My friends wondered if I had taken leave of my senses …
16take leave of senses — take leave of (your) senses to become crazy. My friends wondered if I had taken leave of my senses …
17take leave — take (your) leave to go away from a gathering. Barlow could only manage a few brief words before taking his leave of this group of happy supporters …
18take leave — take a vacation, go on vacation …
19take leave of — abandon, go away from or become separated from I think that he has taken leave of his senses. He has been acting very strange lately …
20take leave of — idi to part or separate from: Have you taken leave of your senses?[/ex] …