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    Dis·em·bark
    /ˌdisemˈbärk/

    verb

    • 1. leave a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle: "the passengers began to disembark"
  2. The meaning of DISEMBARK is to remove to shore from a ship. How to use disembark in a sentence.

  3. to leave a ship, aircraft, etc., after a trip: They disembarked in Seattle.

  4. to leave a ship, aircraft, etc., after a trip: They disembarked in Seattle.

  5. Use the verb disembark to describe leaving a ship, airplane or other type of vehicle, like making sure you haven't left anything in the plane's overhead compartment before you disembark.

  6. When passengers disembark from a ship, aeroplane, or bus, they leave it at the end of their journey.

  7. to remove or unload (cargo or passengers) from a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle. disembark. / ˌdɪsɪmˈbɑːk; dɪsˌɛmbɑːˈkeɪʃən / verb. to land or cause to land from a ship, aircraft, etc. several passengers disembarked. we will disembark the passengers. Discover More. Derived Forms. disembarkation, noun. Discover More. Other Words From.

  8. Jun 2, 2024 · disembark (third-person singular simple present disembarks, present participle disembarking, simple past and past participle disembarked) ( transitive) To remove from on board a vessel; to put on shore. Synonyms: land, debark. The general disembarked the troops. 1604, William Shakespeare, Othello:

  9. 1. to go ashore from a ship. 2. to leave an aircraft or other vehicle. v.t. 3. to remove or unload (cargo or passengers) from a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle. [1575–85; < Middle French desembarquer = des- dis - 1 + embarquer to embark] dis•em`bar•ka′tion, dis`em•bark′ment, n.

  10. disembark. to leave a vehicle, especially a ship or an aircraft, at the end of a journey; to let or make people leave a vehicle. We will be disembarking at midday. disembark from something They had just disembarked from their tour bus after a 12-hour journey.

  11. disembark in American English. (ˌdɪsɪmˈbɑrk ; ˈdɪsɪmˌbærk ) verb transitive. 1. to unload (passengers or goods) from a ship, aircraft, etc. verb intransitive. 2. to go ashore from a ship or leave an aircraft or other means of transportation. Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition.

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