point of departure in English

noun
1
the starting point of a line of thought or course of action; an initial assumption.
composers take him as a point of departure, whether by a process of imitation, assimilation, or rejection
noun

Use "point of departure" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "point of departure" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "point of departure", or refer to the context using the word "point of departure" in the English Dictionary.

1. It was a diamond cell structure was the point of departure.

2. Any policy which will not accept this as the point of departure will be wrong .

3. • The most important point of departure, however, is that rights, whether moral or legal, can involve Correlative duties

4. Fijian mythology holds that this island is the disembodied spirits' point of departure from this world to the afterlife.

5. • Weather conditions at the aircraft’s point of departure and flying conditions en route to the rescue site may limit rescue capabilities.

6. This book takes the phenomenon of the 2011 uprisings as a point of departure for reassessing Clientelism and patronage across the entire …

7. Oversize because Copping's point of departure thellos season was portraiture, and he designed that coat and others after an artist's model's studio robe.

8. A crew member is considered to be acclimatised to a 2-hour wide time zone surrounding the local time at the point of departure.

9. The double aspect of the body as a physical Corporeality and lived embodiment is the point of departure for different perspectives in the study of perceptual conscience

10. [We must find the lost word,] [and remember what the blood,] [the tides, the earth, and the body say,] [and return to the point of departure...]

11. The Airstrip "The great defense against the air menace is to attack the enemy's aircraft as near as possible to their point of departure." - Winston Churchill

12. The movement intensified the notion that reality is not given but must be constructed, and its point of departure in the modern world is not something extraordinary, but that which Circumvolves everyday life.

13. Cross-country time is defined in §61.1(b)(3)(ii) as time acquired during Aflight that is conducted in an appropriate aircraft; "that includes apoint of landing that was at least a straight-line distance of more than 50 nautical miles from the original point of departure";

14. Concentrative movement therapy (CMT) is a psychotherapeutic method for group and individual therapy which is based on thought models stemming from developmental psychology and depth psychology.Taking as its point of departure the theory that perception is comprised of sensation and experience (Viktor von Weizsäcker), CMT is interested in the conscious perception of the body in the …

15. The Kingdom of Denmark and the Federal Republic of Germany provided the following information: (1) the annual probability of the significant wave height's exceeding two metres is less than 10 % on the identified routes; (2) the ships to which the derogation would apply are engaged in regular services; (3) the voyages do not exceed thirty miles from the point of departure; (4) the sea area where the passenger ships are sailing is provided with shore-based navigational guidance and reliable weather forecast services as well as adequate and sufficient search and rescue facilities; (5) the profile of the journey and the schedule of the voyages are not compatible with registering passenger details in a synchronised way with land transport; and (6) the derogation request would not have any adverse effect on competition.