It's not clear exactly what you mean.
In the US, most employment is "at-will" where, technically, an employer can end a person's employment at any time for (just about) any reason, and an employee is free to terminate the relationship as well.
If your employer has a stated policy of paying "severance pay", then they have to pay it. Other than that, they generally don't have any obligations, unless they're laying off several people. If you said "My last day will be the 30th" and they tell you "Go home now", you should be paid for the time you actually worked up until the point where you left, and anything more than that you shouldn't count on.
The whole situation is pretty complicated, and if you really think your employer has cheated you you should speak with an attorney, because it really does all depend on the details.
The employer walked.
Describe the way Maniac walked out of town. How did you feel about his leaving?Answer this question…
She walked through the forest as though she owned it, her confidence palpable with each step.
He felt aggrieved when his friends walked away, leaving him behind.
they farted and then walked away, leaving the citezens to live under the smell.
magic eraser
Leaving is like saying goodbye. Leaving like the dust and the wind. Anything that uses like or as in it can be a metaphor for leaving.
Arthropods first walked on land, though it would be hard to tell which genus, let alone species was first.
Tom Robinson was shot, and the Ewells walked free (even though they were guilty)!!
You have put on too much cologne. That bacon cologne has an intriguing aroma.
The words, though and thought are two different correctly spelt words. Though, means however. Example (he walked the dog, "though" he got ice-pops first) or (he walked the dog, however, he got ice-pops first) Thought is the process of using your mind to consider something carefully. It is also the passed tense of "thinking". (eg: he always "thought" santa Claus was real)
Mario feigned surprise when I walked into the party even though he knew I'd be there.