- (Commonwealth, intransitive) To leave, to go away
They've pissed off and left us in the lurch!
piss off, piss offed, piss offed
- To remove by cutting
His parents cut him off to encourage him to find a job.
cut off, cut, cut
- (intransitive) To lose one's way
Don't you have a map? How did we get lost?
get lost, got, got
- To flee by running
The crowd had to run away from the burning structure with only the clothes on their backs.
run away, ran, run
- to leave in a hurry
What are you kids doing on my lawn? Scram!
scram, scramed, scramed
- (US) move or run away quickly
skedaddle, skedaddled, skedaddled
- to run away, to flee
vamoose, vamoosed, vamoosed
- to begin moving away
We will head off on our holidays tomorrow.
head off, head offed, head offed
- go away
do one, did, done
- (intransitive, idiomatic, vulgar) To leave, go away, disappear
Bugger off! You're joking, aren't you?
bugger off, bugger offed, bugger offed
- to flee
run for the hills, ran, run
- (Internet slang, text messaging, vulgar) Get the fuck out
GTFO of my house.
- (intransitive) To flee, often secretly; to steal away
The thieves absconded with our property.
abscond, absconded, absconded
- (intransitive, slang) To leave quickly or in a hurry; to depart, flee
absquatulate, absquatulated, absquatulated
- (slang, idiomatic) To begin traveling in an automobile or other road vehicle
If we're gonna make it by sunset, we'd better hit the road.
hit the road, hit, hit
- To run away, to flee
After snatching my handbag he just legged it.
leg it, leg ited, leg ited