Leave

Leave may refer to:

  • Leave of absence, a period of time that one is to be away from one's primary job while maintaining the status of employee
  • Leave (military), a period of time in which a soldier is allowed to be away from his or her assigned unit
  • Leave (film), a 2010 film by Robert Celestino

Read more about Leave:  Music

Other articles related to "leave":

Leave (U.S. Military) - Types of Leave
... The four most common types of leave are Ordinary leave which is regular chargeable leave time, emergency leave which is processed more quickly due to an emergency ... Servicemembers using PTDY (Permissive TDY) are not charged while on leave but are also not granted travel pay ... Excess Leave (see AR 600-8-10) ...
Leave (U.S. Military) - Terminal Leave
... a member may take the remainder of the leave they have ... June 30, and the member has 30 days of leave accrued, the member may go on "terminal leave" beginning June 1 ... Once they entered "terminal leave" they would essentially be out of the military, but would still collect a paycheck and other entitlements, such as basic allowance for housing, basic allowance for ...
Leave - Music
... "Leave!", a 2009 soul song performed by the English singer VV Brown Leave (album), a 2002 Mandopop album "Leave (Get Out)", a 2004 R B song "Leave" (Lula and Bela B ... song), a 2000 pop rock song "Leave" (R.E.M ... song), a 1996 alternative rock song "Leave" (Sertab Erener song), a 2004 pop song "Leave", a song by Matchbox Twenty from the album Mad Season ...
Exmormons - Post-disaffiliation Issues - Social
... Ex-Mormons who publicly leave Mormonism usually face social stigmatization ... Although many leave to be true to themselves or to a new belief structure, they leave at a cost many leave feeling ostracized and pressured and miss out on major family events such as temple ... Based upon a belief that those who leave are in danger of negative eternal consequences (see Latter-day Saint views of ex-Mormons), Mormon peers, church officials, and family members may criticize ...
French Leave
... French leave is "Leave of absence without permission or without announcing one's departure", including leaving a party without bidding farewell to the host ... The intent behind this behaviour is to leave without disturbing the host ... phrase is "filer à l'anglaise" (to take English leave) and seems to date from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries ...

Famous quotes containing the word leave:

    The aim, if reached or not, makes great the life:
    Try to be Shakespeare, leave the rest to fate!
    Robert Browning (1812–1889)

    I leave before being left. I decide.
    Brigitte Bardot (b. 1933)

    O night,
    you take the petals
    of the roses in your hand,
    but leave the stark core
    of the rose
    to perish on the branch.
    Hilda Doolittle (1886–1961)