French leave

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File:Martin Parmer - Gone to Texas.jpg
Article from the December 29, 1825, edition of the National Gazette and Literary Register published in Philadelphia reporting that Missouri Senator "Col. Palmer (Martin Parmer) is said to have taken French leave and gone to Texas".


French leave, sometimes a French exit, an Irish goodbye or an Irish exit, is a departure from a location or event without informing others or without seeking approval.[1] Examples include relatively innocuous acts such as leaving a party without bidding farewell in order to avoid disturbing or upsetting the host, or more problematic acts such as a soldier leaving his post without authorization.[2]

The first attestation of the phrase in the Oxford English Dictionary is from 1751, a time when the English and French cultures were heavily interlinked.

In French, the equivalent phrase is filer à l'anglaise ("to leave English style")[3] and seems to date from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries.[4]

First usage

The Oxford English Dictionary records: "the custom (in the 18th century prevalent in France and sometimes imitated in England) of going away from a reception, etc. without taking leave of the host or hostess. Hence, jocularly, to take French leave is to go away, or do anything, without permission or notice."

James Boswell's journal for November 15, 1762, mentions his friend not seeing him off on his leaving Scotland "... as Cairnie told me that people never took leave in France, I made the thing sit pretty easy."[5]

In Canada and the United States, the expression Irish goodbye is also used.[6]

Military usage

The term is sometimes used to mean the act of leisurely absence from a military unit.[7]

References

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  1. Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (Millennium Edition; London: Cassell, 1999)
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  7. For the usage, see for example the war memoirs of Commandant Ludwig Krause 1899–1900, Cape Town 1996, p. 65.

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